How We Brought Parker Kelley's Sunset Point Vision to Light
When Parker Kelley from Home Life and Style needed lighting for her Sunset Point Project House, she came to Flemings Lighting in Cohasset Village. We recently filmed her consultation walkthrough to show how we help customers -- from TV designers to first-time homeowners -- find the perfect fixtures for every room.
It Starts With Your Space, Not Our Showroom
Before we pick a single fixture, we want to understand your home. That often means a house call. We look at your floor plan, your finishes, the natural light, and how each room connects to the next.
For the Sunset Point Project House, we visited Parker's space first -- the blue fantasy quartz in the kitchen, the mother-of-pearl tile in the powder room, the warm tones in the master bath. That visit gave us everything we needed. As our designer, Jeanette Gallagher put it: "After seeing your space, it came to me easily -- just in a dream that night."
Room by Room, Decision by Decision
We don't hand you a catalog and wish you luck. We curate specific options for each room based on what we learned from your home.
For Parker's Sunset Point project, that meant:
Kitchen island: Hudson pendants with marine glass -- a nautical texture that plays off the blue fantasy quartz countertops
Dining area: A four-light chandelier (not five) because scale matters for that particular table
Staircase: Mini Darlana lanterns in polished nickel, creating continuity as you move through the house
Master bedroom: A Hinkley flush mount that conceals the bulbs -- because Parker's husband prefers it that way, and we listened
Master bath: Uttermost mirrors with hand-hammered silver frames and beveled glass, paired with coordinating pendants over each sink
Powder room: One statement pendant over the pedestal sink, keeping it simple so the beautiful tile can shine
The Details That Matter
A few principles guide every consultation:
Finishes should converse. The Sunset Point master bath tile had a hint of creamy gold. We chose mirrors with silver frames that carry just a touch of warmth -- enough to pull the room together without matching too literally.
Echoes create cohesion. The chandelier over the dining table and the lanterns on the staircase come from the same Visual Comfort family. You might not notice it consciously, but your eye recognizes that something feels right.
Negative space is your friend. Especially in coastal homes like Sunset Point, airy fixtures with open frames keep rooms feeling light and uncluttered. As Parker noted, "Everything you're choosing is really nice and airy -- so smart for our space."
Mixing metals is allowed. Polished nickel in one room, brass in another -- it works when there's intention behind it.
Check out Parker’s full details on what she picked out on her website here!
Try Before You Commit
Here's something that surprises people: we lend fixtures out. If you're not sure how a pendant will look over your island or whether a lamp suits your nightstand, take it home. Live with it for a few days. It's much easier to fall in love with a piece when it's not competing with a hundred others on the showroom floor.
Lighting the South Shore Since 1931
Flemings Lighting has been helping South Shore homeowners make these decisions for nearly a century. Whether you're a designer like Parker Kelley working on a showpiece project or a homeowner updating a single room, we bring the same attention to detail.
Building new construction in Hingham? Renovating a historic home in Scituate? Replacing a dated fixture in your Cohasset kitchen? We're here to help.
Ready to get started? Book a consultation, give us a call, or stop by the shop in Cohasset Village. We'd love to help bring your vision to light.
