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Warm white or Cool white?
Colour Temperature - With conventional lamps, choosing the “colour of light” emitted by a lamp was not a choice that was generally made. With some LED products, there is a choice of colours, choosing a colour will set the mood of your space.

Correlated Colour temperature (CCT) in lighting describes how the colour of the light appears from a lamp, measured in kelvins (K).
Imagine a scale from 1000K (very red)  to 10,000K (very blue)  (actual scale is wider).  The higher up the scale you go, the closer the light resembles blue daylight.
Confusingly, colour temperature does not describe the actual temperature of the lamp itself but the colour it produces and counter-intuitively; the higher the colour temperature the “cooler” a lamp will look.

Colour Temperature LED Lights: Bulb, Downlight, Strip, Panel, Street Lights

Put simply, colour temperature is based on how the colour of heated metal changes as its temperature is increased - turning from red to yellow then blue.  You can then determine the temperature of a heated metal by its colour.  This range of colours at different temperatures has become useful for describing the colour tint of white light.  The colour of light from an LED lamp is approximated or “correlated” to this scale.

Warm or cool?
There are no rules - the choice is about personal preference and use. If you like the traditional yellowish colour of a conventional lamp then warm white around (2700-3000K ) would be the ideal choice, this is the most popular choice for homes. If you want a modern, clean look, you may prefer the cleaner, brighter feel of a cool white lamp (4000K+). Cool white light contains more blue light and looks brighter to the eye (this is why cool white bulbs have a higher lumen output when compared to the equivalent warm white bulb).   It also seems people from sunnier countries tend to prefer white light compared to people from cooler countries who prefer more warm light.  

In commercial applications choosing the right colour temperature is important and will depend on the mood you want to create and the products you are promoting - for example freshly baked cookies and bread may look better under a warm white light. A cool white light may not make the product look as appealing but it would be a good idea to do some trials to see what works best.

Where can I use them?
Below are some common areas where the different colours can be used:

  • Warm to Warm white – living room, bedroom, hallway
  • Day White to White – kitchen, study, bathroom, cupboard, office, retail
  • White to Cool white - Commercial, retail, art studios

Allow some time to get used to any change especially if changing from warm to cool white. 

Source: integral-led

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