In our connected age, it’s hard to live a healthy, balanced home life. In Homebody, we test one product that claims to help.
I have a well-documented issue with lamps. I don’t like the way they look. I don’t like how much they cost. They just make me uncomfortable.
This is a strange prejudice, I know. Good lighting is important for any home. Lighting sets the mood; it helps me focus or relax. (Or even, as I learned recently, fall asleep and wake up.) The light we surround ourselves with says a lot about us, and guides our lives on the peripheries — when we wake up, when we fall asleep, whether we wear blue light filter lenses or even like to soak up summer rays for warmth or tanning.
I’ve been trying to figure this out for a bit now — my “lighting identity.” A few things I know: as I mentioned, I’m vexed by traditional shade lamps. Track lights are not my thing. The latest experiment in home lighting is Dyson’s Lightcycle Morph, which by its do-it-all design seems a challenge: if the Lightcycle Morph can be any light for any person, built by a beloved and innovative company, then it ought to be the perfect lamp to define my own light-self by. I used it in my home for a month to find out.
