I’m romanticizing my home this fall – and this vintage lighting trend is the effortless, elegant touch making it happen

It’s not about utility, it’s about mood. Designers say candle sconces bring back the romance, and we’ve found the six chicest ones to shop

High-ceilinged dining room featuring ample wall art, with two of those works, which flank either side of the ornate fireplace and mantle mirror, being candle sconces in disguise.
(Image credit: Salon 21)

Try walking into a buzzy New York spot right now – hotel, restaurant, boutique, doesn’t matter – without running into a candle sconce. Good luck. At Café Zaffri, where I find myself more than I should, lantern-like versions flank mirror-framed artworks above the booths. Like so many interior design trends, sconces arrived as a trickle, then suddenly all at once.

Not long ago, they were the kind of lighting idea you’d only score on 1stDibs or Facebook Marketplace. I loved them back then – they felt so dramatic, a nod to a bygone era when candles weren’t a choice but the only option. Now, with LEDs blazing and the blue glow of a phone on every table, I’m nostalgic for a glow from a world I never actually lived in, which is why I am loving this lighting trend.

Ornate candle sconce hanging in a bright white entryway area decorated with a green fern plant and blue botanical wall art.

(Image credit: Jean Allsopp. Design: Lauren Conner Interiors)

Candlelight, she explains, creates an enviable atmosphere. ‘It adds a warm, soft glow that instantly makes a space more intimate,’ Alex continues. ‘Unlike harsh lighting, it flickers, it casts shadows, it creates depth. It encourages calm, enhances mood, and adds that touch of romance or coziness we’re all chasing.’ In other words, candle sconces offer yet another reason to avoid the dreaded big light.

And everyone – truly everyone – is catching on. Zara, H&M Home, Magnolia, and Lulu and Georgia (just to name a few) have their own versions, while at the high end, this lighting trend has migrated into bona fide art galleries. In one dining room project, Alex even used paintings by Casper White that incorporate candle holders directly. ‘I love when a piece of art becomes a literal conversation piece, straddling art and design,’ she tells me.

Cream living room with wooden beams. A cream boucle curved sofa is on the left and a green curved armchair on the right with a stone ways coffee table in the middle. A green rugs sits in the middle

(Image credit: Lulu and Georgia)

As for styling, Alex admits real, lit candles are the chicest option – whether your sconces are modern, antique, or somewhere in between. But flameless is fair game, too. We love the ribbed LED tapers Joanna Gaines created for Target, which look impressively real.

Regarding where to put them, ‘next to a mantle would be a good idea and evoke the sense of a real wood-burning fireplace,’ suggests Alex. Birmingham-based designer Lauren Conner of Lauren Conner Interiors agrees, though she urges experimentation. Dining rooms are an obvious choice, but sconces can feel equally chic framing a kitchen bar or as a statement feature on a bare wall. ‘Whether framing a mirror or sparkling on a bare wall, candle sconces can elevate any space with romance and old-world glow,’ Lauren notes.

I am sold, and sharing my favorite picks from a late-night, candlelit deep dive into all the best candle sconces available right now.


Candle sconces are the fall decor idea everyone can add to their home to instantly make it feel more cozy and elegant. I am all for romanticizing my home, especially during cozy season, and spending a few minutes walking around my apartment, lighting my sconces, is exactly the vibe I am after going into autumn.

Style Editor

Julia Demer is a New York–based Style Editor at Homes & Gardens with a sharp eye for where fashion meets interiors. Having cut her teeth at L’Officiel USA and The Row before pivoting into homes, she believes great style is universal – whether it’s a perfect outfit, a stunning room, or the ultimate set of sheets. Passionate about art, travel, and pop culture, Julia brings a global, insider perspective to every story.

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