So I finally caved and replaced the hideous boob lights in my hallway last month. Went with these simple glass pendants - nothing fancy, but man, what a difference! That's the thing about pendant lighting... you don't realize how bad your old fixtures were until you see what good ones can do.
HORNE has this collection I've been eyeing forever (my wallet is giving me side-eye). They carry these brands that aren't the usual suspects you find at big box stores.
Herman Miller makes these bubble pendants that I swear haven't aged a day since they were designed in the 50s. My aunt had one in her house growing up - still remember how the light diffused through it. They're spendy but last forever.
The kitchen is honestly where pendants make the biggest impact. Had a client who was adamant about keeping her recessed lighting until I temporarily hung a pair of Audo pendants over her island. Completely changed her mind in like 5 minutes flat.
Moooi does these absolutely wild fixtures - their Random Light looks like someone captured a ball of yarn in mid-explosion. Not for minimalists! But if you want something people actually comment on? That's your pendant.
Few quick tips from someone who's made these mistakes so you don't have to:
Hang them lower than you think. Most people go too high, especially over dining tables. 30-33" from table to bottom of pendant is the sweet spot.
For kitchens, make sure you can still see to chop vegetables. Sounds obvious but I've seen gorgeous pendants that cast shadows exactly where you need to see. Test before you commit.
Really wanted a cluster of those Gubi Multi-Lites for my own place, but my ceilings are barely 8 feet so had to pass. Still bitter about it. They have these rotating shades so you can direct light different ways. Pretty genius design.
Living room pendants are tricky. They work in corners for reading nooks, but I'd skip them as main lighting unless your ceilings are 10'+ and you've got other light sources. Nobody wants to feel like they're in an interrogation.
The Nelson Saucers from Herman Miller are probably the safest bet if you're nervous. They're like the little black dress of lighting - work with literally everything and never look dated. My sister's had hers for like 15 years through three different design phases.
Had a customer return a pendant once because it was "too small" - turned out he hung it 5 feet above his dining table. Looked like it was trying to escape the room. Height matters, people!
Most of these now come with LED options. Worth the upgrade. My power bill actually dropped noticeably after switching from old halogens.
Bottom line - good pendants aren't cheap, but they're the jewelry of your space. And unlike that statement necklace you bought and never wear, you'll see these every single day. Worth getting the good stuff.