A Guide to Retail Jewelry Lighting

Great Lighting is Key to the Best Jewelry Store Design
June 20, 2016
Displaying Jewelry in the Best Light
June 20, 2016

A Guide to Retail Jewelry Lighting

Jewellery doesn’t sparkle and shine on its own – the reason a gem looks radiant is because of the way it reflects light! That being said, lighting is integral to retail design in a jewellery store. You want your displays to entice customers and show off your products in all their brilliance! Hopefully, we can help. This post will lay out options for various jewellery lighting displays.

The Illuminated Wall Display

Planning on featuring jewellery within shelving units alongside a wall of your store? It’s a great way to display a large amount of inventory, but it’s important to make sure items don’t get lost in the shadows.

For the most dramatic effect, use puck lights to call attention to individual pieces, as seen in the photo to the right. Puck lighting above jewellery creates beautiful silhouettes and puts a spotlight on each piece.

If you love the look of evenly illuminated in-wall shelving displays, there is a way to avoid the spotlight effect. For a more subtle glow, install light fixtures on the inside edges of your shelves.

The In-Counter Lit Showcase

You’re showing off your most valuable items in the counter-style showcase, so it’s important to get the lighting right. However, make sure the actual light fixtures do not become focal points.

With a glass showcase, you need to integrate the lighting so that your display will shine, and so that it’s not blocked in any way by wires or lamp heads. The best way to do this is to install thin lighting strips inside the showcase, just below where the edge of the counter is.

The Enticing Display Window:

Your window display can be the number one determinant of store traffic. Like the counter showcase, it’s ideal if the light fixtures aren’t visible at all here so that your most alluring items take centre stage.

You will likely have wall space to work with on all four sides of the window display, so it wouldn’t be too difficult to align micro-fluorescent fixtures against the edges for even illumination.

Depending on what types of items you are featuring, you might want to incorporate some spot lighting as well. You could use an adjustable display light, installing it out of sight but focusing the beam exactly where you need it to shine. Another option is to use adjustable recessed lights in the ceiling above the window display.

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