How to Mix Vintage and Modern Lighting in One Room – 5 Designer Tips to Create a Timeless Transitional Scheme

Learn how to mix old and new lighting fixtures in any room to add contrast and character

A bright, airy kitchen with cream-colored cabinetry, a large dark wood island with barstool seating, and marble countertops. Two white pendant lights hang above the island, and a large vase of greenery sits as a centerpiece near a window.
(Image credit: Design by Sherwood Kypreos)

Mixing vintage and modern lighting can feel intimidating. Lighting is highly visible, often sculptural, and closely tied to a home’s architecture – which means mismatched pieces can quickly feel jarring. But when done well, blending old and new lighting adds depth, warmth, and a sense of evolution that purely period-correct schemes often lack.

Lighting is also one of the most forgiving places to experiment with mixing eras. Fixtures are relatively easy to change, highly expressive, and often collectible, making them ideal for introducing contrast without committing to a full redesign. Here, interior designers share five expert-led ways to mix modern and vintage lighting, so it feels intentional, cohesive, and timeless.

1. Balance Silhouettes and Let Shape Create Cohesion

A moody dining room featuring sage green walls with white floral botanical patterns. A large, matte light-blue oval table sits in the center, surrounded by grey checkered upholstered chairs. A modern brass multi-arm chandelier hangs from the green ceiling, and a tall window provides soft natural light.

The modern chandelier used in this dining room is the Kukka Chandelier from Lulu and Georgia’s Sarah Sherman Samuel collaboration.

(Image credit: Design by Lauren Stern / Photography by Aimée Mazzenga)

When mixing vintage and modern lighting, designers often look beyond age and focus instead on shape. Strong, considered silhouettes help create cohesion, even when fixtures come from very different eras. A sculptural vintage lamp base might echo the curve of a modern table or pendant, while rounded sconces can soften sharper architectural lines elsewhere in the room.

New York–based interior designer Lauren Stern explains that this approach mirrors how she thinks about rooms as a whole. ‘Every room we design has a balance of materials – metal, stone, wood, upholstery – and a harmonious combination of color, dark and light,’ she says. ‘Vintage pieces echo this philosophy. They should feel cohesive in a room and bring balance and harmony.’

By repeating shapes and visual weight rather than styles, vintage lighting stops feeling like an outlier and instead becomes part of the room’s rhythm. The result is a space that feels calm and composed, where old and new sit comfortably together.

2. Assign Different Roles to Vintage and Modern Lighting

A cozy powder room viewed through a doorway, featuring pink and white geometric wallpaper, a classic white pedestal sink with brass hardware, and a small wood-framed mirror. A floral pendant light and a wall sconce provide warm, soft lighting.

Sherwood Kypreos sourced this vintage sconce from Remains Lighting, paired with an Astier De Villatte pendant. 

(Image credit: Design by Sherwood Kypreos)

One of the most effective ways to mix eras is to think about lighting in terms of function. Vintage fixtures often excel as decorative or focal pieces – chandeliers, statement pendants, or characterful table lamps – while modern lighting is typically better suited to task and ambient roles.

George Kypreos and Shana Sherwood, the husband-wife team behind Los Angeles-based design studio, Sherwood Kypreos, describe lighting as a cast of characters rather than a collection of showpieces. ‘Not every light can steal the show,’ they explain. ‘Too much feature lighting can cheapen a space. Some must be supporting characters, but they’re still as important to the overall story.’ By allowing vintage lighting to provide atmosphere and personality, and modern fixtures to support everyday living, rooms feel both beautiful and practical.

3. Customize the Component

A bright, airy kitchen with cream-colored cabinetry, a large dark wood island with barstool seating, and marble countertops. Two white pendant lights hang above the island, and a large vase of greenery sits as a centerpiece near a window.

In this Santa Monica kitchen, Sherwood Kypreos used Urban Electric flush mounts, and vintage schoolhouse pendants from Obsolete.

(Image credit: Design by Sherwood Kypreos)

Designers rarely treat lighting as a fixed, finished object. Instead, they often see it as a collection of parts that can be mixed, matched, and tailored to suit a space. This approach is especially useful when decorating with vintage lighting, which can be adapted to feel more contemporary without losing their charm.

‘You can tailor lighting to suit your needs,’ say Sherwood Kypreos. ‘Change cord colors, change fitters, fabricate different shades – buy vintage globes from one place and chains from somewhere else to achieve the outcome you want.’

Breaking lighting down into components gives greater control over proportion, finish, and material, allowing vintage pieces to sit more naturally within modern interiors. Visually, this creates a collected, custom feel – lighting that looks designed specifically for the room rather than sourced in one go.

4. Play with Scale to Create Intentional Contrast

A view through a white doorway into an elegant dining room. In the foreground, a white pedestal table holds a vase with calla lilies. The dining room features a dark wood table, leather chairs, and a statement wall with a hand-painted botanical mural in black ink on a neutral background.

Claire Staszak pairs a vintage entry fixture with the Double Arm Beldi from Urban Electric in the dining room.

(Image credit: Design by Centered by Design / Photography by Taylor Hall O'Brien)

Scale is one of the most powerful tools for making mixed-era lighting feel deliberate. Contrasting proportions help prevent a room from feeling flat, while also ensuring that no single piece overwhelms the space.

Chicago-based interior designer Claire Staszak, founder of Centered by Design, notes, ‘Scale really makes all the difference in lighting. Varying the size of your lighting is one of the most effective ways to mix old and new.’

Playing with scale within each lighting role adds depth without disrupting function. A generously scaled modern fixture can provide even, anchoring light, while smaller vintage pieces introduce moments of softness and detail. The contrast in proportion creates visual tension that energises the room, without asking decorative or ambient lighting to do the wrong job.

5. Update the Shade and Let Contrast Do the Heavy Lifting

A close-up of an eclectic bedroom featuring a bed with a vibrant floral and lily pad patterned headboard. Next to the bed is a white wicker side table holding a light blue ceramic lamp with a hand-drawn celestial shade. The beige wall above is decorated with a small gallery of framed art, including a portrait of a woman in a red bikini and a botanical illustration of orange flowers.

(Image credit: Shades by Hum London / Photography by Sarah Griggs)

Sometimes, the simplest way to mix vintage and modern lighting is by rethinking the lampshade. Swapping an outdated or utilitarian shade for something more refined can instantly transform a vintage base – or soften a modern one.

Ellie and Hermione Gee, co-founders of Hum London, say this idea is central to their brand. ‘Making lampshades to pair with vintage lamps is actually where we began. Antique pieces can bring so much to a space, and we’re very much in favor of mixing old and new,’ the sisters explain. ‘A great way to make a vintage lamp sing is by pairing it with a more elevated lampshade.’

They point out that many vintage lamps come with plastic-lined shades that cast harsh light, whereas thoughtfully made shades can dramatically change the mood of a room. Their perforated designs are intended to soften light and add atmosphere, proving that even subtle updates can have a significant impact. Visually, this approach makes heritage pieces feel intentional rather than inherited, while creating warmer, more inviting light


Mixing vintage and modern lighting is less about strict rules and more about balance, contrast, and repetition. When shapes relate, finishes complement one another, and each fixture has a clear role, rooms feel layered and personal rather than chaotic.

Experiment slowly, mix in pieces with vintage character alongside true antiques, and don’t be afraid to customize. When done well, mixed-era lighting brings warmth, depth, and a sense of history – creating interiors that feel genuinely lived-in.

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Chloe Frost-Smith
Contributor

Chloe Frost-Smith is a freelance travel and interiors writer, with a home that reads like a passport of the places she loves most. She’s forever meeting artisans, scouring flea markets, and collecting one-of-a-kind objects on her travels – Romanian ceramics for her kitchen plate wall, Swedish textiles to layer with French linens, basketry from Botswana – resulting in a style as eclectic as her itineraries. A maximalist at heart, she’s constantly finding ways to make her space cosier for her hound, Humphrey (who is largely responsible for her expanding sheepskin-throw collection).