SKU: 45560119850

Mouse-shaped Wall Lamps

Sale price$68.36 Regular price$75.95
Save 10%

Shipping Estimate
USA
  • USA
  • CAN

Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 15 - Jul 20

Promo Codes Available:

For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15

Description

Mouse-shaped Wall LampsMouse shaped Wall Lamps is a carefully chosen wall light for interiors where lighting needs to do more than simply illuminate a room. It is intended to help define atmosphere, add visual interest and give a space a more considered, finished quality. Whether you are updating one corner of a home, planning a full renovation or sourcing lighting for a design project, this piece gives you a decorative focal point that can work across bedrooms, hallways,

Mouse-shaped Wall Lamps is a carefully chosen wall light for interiors where lighting needs to do more than simply illuminate a room. It is intended to help define atmosphere, add visual interest and give a space a more considered, finished quality. Whether you are updating one corner of a home, planning a full renovation or sourcing lighting for a design project, this piece gives you a decorative focal point that can work across bedrooms, hallways, living rooms, reading corners, corridors and boutique hospitality spaces.

Why this wall light deserves attention

Good lighting changes how a room feels. It shapes shadows, draws the eye to textures and materials, and helps furniture, artwork and architectural details feel intentional rather than accidental. The Mouse-shaped Wall Lamps is useful because it sits between function and decoration: it can contribute practical light, but it also brings a distinct design presence. That makes it particularly valuable on product pages, in real homes, and in trade projects where every visible detail has to justify its place.

The style direction is modern, design-led and versatile, which gives the piece enough character to stand out without making it difficult to combine with other finishes. It can sit comfortably with warm woods, stone, plaster, painted walls, upholstered furniture, patterned rugs and metal accents. Used well, it can make a room feel more layered and more personal than a purely functional fitting would.

Design character and visual effect

This product has been selected for the way it contributes to the wider composition of a room. Its proportions, finish and silhouette help it read as a design object, not just as electrical equipment. In a minimalist setting, it can provide the single decorative gesture that prevents the room from feeling flat. In a more eclectic interior, it can join a larger mix of colour, texture and collected objects while still feeling purposeful.

When choosing lighting, it is worth thinking about what the fitting will look like both switched on and switched off. During the day, a good light should still contribute to the room through shape, finish and placement. In the evening, the same piece should help the interior feel warmer, softer and more atmospheric. This is why design-led lighting is so important for spaces that need to feel welcoming, photographed, lived in or commercially memorable.

Where to use it

The Mouse-shaped Wall Lamps can be used in a wide range of schemes. In a home, consider it for bedrooms, hallways, living rooms, reading corners, corridors and boutique hospitality spaces. In a hallway or transitional space, it can add rhythm and visual punctuation. In a bedroom, it can make the space feel more intimate and hotel-like. In a living room, it can support layered lighting alongside lamps, pendants and natural daylight. In a dining or entertaining area, it can become part of the evening atmosphere rather than an afterthought.

For trade and hospitality buyers, the same qualities are useful in restaurants, boutique hotels, serviced apartments, retail spaces and interior design projects. Decorative lighting often has to work harder in commercial settings because it needs to be durable enough for repeated use, attractive enough to photograph well, and distinctive enough to support a brand or design concept. This piece is suitable for projects where the lighting should feel curated rather than generic.

How to style it in a home

For a calm modern interior, pair this light with neutral walls, natural materials and a restrained palette. Let the shape of the fitting provide the detail while the surrounding room remains simple. For a warmer, more layered look, combine it with walnut, oak, rattan, linen, velvet, ceramic pieces and framed artwork. The result is more collected and personal, especially when the lighting is repeated thoughtfully across a room or corridor.

It can also work well as part of a mixed lighting plan. Most rooms need more than one light source: ambient light for general brightness, task lighting for reading or working, and accent lighting to create depth. Use this piece as one layer within that plan. Pair it with designer wall lights, designer lighting, Scandinavian lighting, hospitality lighting so the room feels designed from several angles rather than lit from a single central point.

For designers, decorators and trade projects

Interior designers and trade buyers often need products that can serve a clear design role while staying flexible enough for different schemes. The Mouse-shaped Wall Lamps is a strong candidate for mood boards, FF&E schedules and decorative lighting specifications because it has a recognizable visual identity without becoming too narrow. It can support residential projects, show apartments, hospitality bedrooms, restaurant corners and boutique retail environments.

For larger projects, consistency matters. Repeating a lighting piece across several rooms, corridors or seating areas can create cohesion and help the project feel more professionally resolved. At the same time, the product can be combined with complementary fittings from nearby categories, allowing a scheme to feel varied without looking random. This is where internal combinations of wall lights, pendants, table lamps and floor lamps become useful for both design and procurement.

Choosing the right placement

Placement is often more important than people expect. A decorative light should be positioned where it will be seen, where the illumination is useful and where the proportions make sense. Think about sight lines from doorways, seating positions and circulation routes. In bedrooms, align lighting with bedside furniture and artwork. In living rooms, use it to support conversation areas or reading corners. In corridors, repeat fittings at a measured rhythm so the space feels intentional.

Before ordering, check the product specifications, dimensions, finish, cable details, bulb requirements and installation notes shown on the product page. These details matter because the best result comes when the fitting is not only beautiful but also proportionate to the wall, ceiling height, furniture layout and level of brightness required. If the product is being used in a trade environment, confirm suitability with the installer or project manager before final specification.

Material, finish and atmosphere

Materials and finishes determine how a light interacts with the rest of the room. Glass can soften and diffuse light. Brass and gold tones can add warmth. Chrome, black or white finishes can feel cleaner and more architectural. Stone or marble details can make a piece feel more substantial. Even when the finish is subtle, it affects how the light sits alongside handles, taps, furniture legs, picture frames and other visible details.

The atmosphere created by this piece will depend on the bulb, the surrounding surfaces and the amount of natural light in the room. Warm bulbs generally create a more relaxed evening mood, while cooler tones can feel sharper and more practical. For living spaces, bedrooms and hospitality interiors, a warm, flattering light is often the most inviting choice. For task-heavy spaces, consider whether additional lighting layers are needed nearby.

Internal pairings and related collections

If you are building a complete scheme, start with the role this product plays and then choose supporting pieces around it. A feature wall light can be paired with a simple ceiling light, a sculptural table lamp or a floor lamp that repeats one material or colour. This helps the room feel connected without every fitting being identical. Browse related designer wall lights, designer lighting, Scandinavian lighting, hospitality lighting to create a more complete lighting story across the home or project.

For SEO and navigation, these related collections are also useful for discovering alternatives if this specific piece is not the perfect fit. You may find a similar silhouette in a different finish, a larger pendant for a dining table, a smaller wall light for a corridor, or a more practical reading lamp for a bedroom. The aim is to choose lighting that supports the room, not simply to fill an empty electrical point.

Frequently asked questions

Is this suitable for homeowners?

Yes. This piece is suitable for homeowners who want a more distinctive alternative to generic lighting. It can be used to refresh a single room or as part of a broader renovation where lighting is central to the final atmosphere.

Can it work for trade or hospitality projects?

Yes, provided the dimensions, installation requirements and specifications match the project. Its decorative character makes it relevant for interior designers, hotels, restaurants, serviced apartments and commercial spaces where the lighting needs to support the design concept.

What should I check before buying?

Review the product dimensions, finish, bulb compatibility, voltage, installation requirements and delivery details. For professional projects, confirm the specification with your electrician, contractor or designer before placing a larger order.

Final thought

The Mouse-shaped Wall Lamps is a design-led lighting choice for people who care about atmosphere, proportion and detail. It can help make a room feel more finished, more welcoming and more memorable, whether the setting is a private home or a trade project. Use it on its own as a focal point or combine it with complementary pieces to create a coherent lighting scheme across several rooms.

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 45560119850

Discover Niche Categories That Outsell

Top-Converting Item to Boost Your Average Order

4.6 ★★★★★
Based on 2346 reviews
Sort
Highest Rating
Newest First
Oldest First
Product Reviews
I
Verified Purchase
InHisHand
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Pastoral Use of Beale's and Carson's Commentary
Format: Hardcover
This book was properly NOT entitled "Commentary on the New Testament Exegesis of the Old Testament." It is a well studied and scholarly look at how the New Testament writers made USE of the Old Testament Scriptures. And they did make use of those Scriptures is varied and instructive ways. Beale and Carson have compiled and edited articles from numerous trustworthy believing scholars which explain where, how, and why specific passages of Old Testament texts were employed by NT authors. These articles are careful to cite OT and NT contexts, predominant Middle Eastern scholastic thought prior to the 1st Century, and provide an analysis of what style was likely being used by the NT author (for example: typology, compare / contrast, poetic / emotive, prophetic fulfillment, simile, and at times even exegetical / interpretive). Such varied approaches by the NT authors to acquiring and working with OT passages begs the question of whether we ought to handle the OT in the same manner as did they. This commentary fairly well states that the answer is, "Yes...but." Yes, if we were to be as careful as they in understanding that we are not always merely quoting and interpreting the OT nor making absurd allegories of the OT texts but using them as instructive examples, poetic bursts of emotion, and historical typographic illustrations then we should indeed use the OT in the same way. Often the articles and entries in the commentary are long. This is not a dictionary and does not lend itself to quick reference lookups. Such attention to detail and depth enhances the experience of using this volume as it unearths elements and aspects of the Old Testament references that we rarely attempt to see from a 1st Century perspective today. Its overall format is rather straightforward. Identify a NT passage and look it up in the commentary in the passage's traditional Protestant biblical order. Generally only OT passages that are directly quoted, paraphrased, alluded to, or cited by the NT are expanded upon in the commentary. If an OT passage is merely somewhat similar to or has only surface resemblances with an OT passage (giving one the feeling that it is being brought to mind for evocative or emotive reasons alone) then the commentary may not touch on it. In general this is a very useful collection of articles. Its heart is not on being a commentary on the entire New Testament but is focused most narrowly on how the New Testament writers put the Old Testament to work to illustrate Jesus as the Christ, the evils of rebellion and sin, and the complex intricacies of God's epic sweeping salvific plan for humanity.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2012
S
Verified Purchase
Shane
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 4
Good, But Realize Its Limits
Format: Hardcover
I agree with the other reviewers who spoke highly of this resource. It is a fine resource for NT studies. However, realize that it isn't really a commentary like most of us are used to (in my opinion, the title is a little misleading). Rather, it is only a commentary on the NT texts that clearly quote OT texts. The book does not comment on entire NT books, but only some select verses. For example, I used this book studying Mark and it only discussed around 30 phrases from the Gospel of Mark - those verses in Mark that are clear OT citations. I wasn't able to use it in Mark studies as much as I had hoped. I realize this is what the book is supposed to do, and it does it very well. Just remember it won't be useful for NT texts that aren't OT quotes. This isn't a critique, just an observation for those interested. You won't be able to use this resource all the time, but it's helpful for those NT texts where an OT citation is found. FYI, I gave it 4 stars instead of 5 because the citations in the articles are not footnotes, but contained in the articles themselves [It looks like this: (eg. R.P. Martin 1974: 97; O'Brien 1982: 151; Hubner 1997a: 91; Gnilka 1980: 168; Barth and Blanke 1994:357, etc.)]. Some citations are very lengthy, which makes it quite cumbersome to read at times. Also, this is subjective I suppose, but I didn't like the font at all (it seemed too tight). All in all, this is a good book for what it does - just realize what it does before you buy it and you won't be disappointed.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2013
E
Verified Purchase
Eric Stampher
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
Can't ask for more, but I want more.
Format: Hardcover
Really, this is just a start. Any commentary is. But this is one of the best because it proceeds from a radical premise: the whole Bible is from God, giving His point of view and superceding that of the human author. Not that this is promoted self-consciously or consistently from each contributor. But the structure of the enterprise is such that they are sucked back into presenting how it is that the old testament is so thoroughly imbued in NT writings, including in ways which both OT and NT writers could not have intended. Treading down this path forces us to question all those teachings we've had where we were told: "Matthew (or Paul or John ...) here had in mind xyz." When Matthew wrote his gospel, we might now surmise that we can't be sure what he himself had in mind, because what we wrote was superintended to the degree that Matthew's sinful thoughts were NOT what ended up on parchment. God's thoughts are there, pure and untainted by Matthew's natural limitations and sin. Attempts to work from Matthew's sinful thoughts and culture to God's meaning miss the point that whatever Matthew was in his head was NOT the end product that flowed out his quill. Remember when Caiaphas spoke what he thought naturally about how it is better for one man to die rather than the whole nation take a hit? He meant it for evil, but God superintended it to be ultimate truth, regardless of that speaker's intent. Same with all holy writings. Yes, holy men of old spake as they were moved, but their holiness does not naturally come out in uncontaminated speech -- that takes a special work of God. This commentary allows for that premise. There's something way more than human going on that ties this whole Bible together in one theme from one Writer. Don't get me wrong, not all these contributors seem to subscribe to my radical conclusions above, although I think the editors do. And their prescribed structure for this commentary nudge the contributors into a path that I think leads to a more theocentric authorship. So this is a good start, but nothing beats trying to read the Bible itself from God's point of view, rather than the hallowed and misguided grammatial-historical human focused approach.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2008
C
Verified Purchase
Craig Stephans
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
An Excellent Resource for all Students of the Bible
Format: Hardcover
This is an incredible resource that looks at New Testament passages in their relation to the Old Testament. The authors go well beyond mere cross referencing and provide in-depth exegetical commentary on the New Testament and the Old Testament contexts. The writers adeptly address specific and general references by the New Testament to the Old Testament. The authors of the chapters of the book are seasoned Biblical writers that incorporate the best from existing commentaries on their subjects in addition to offering their own profound insights. This is a rich resources that is simple, cogent, well written and easy to read. Each chapter has extensive bibliographies indicating the thoroughness of the research. This is a resource book to definitely add to your library for personal devotional use, a writing resource or a preaching resource. I am very pleased with it so far. Craig Stephans, author of
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2007
A
Verified Purchase
Amazon Customer
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
Book
Format: Hardcover
Great reading
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2026

recommand products