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Service DescriptionFor Projects & Trade

Luminous Spaces

Discover how designers and homeowners alike are using Dazuma to craft perfectly lit environments for every mood.

Sarah Miller
@Sarah Miller
David Thompson
@David Thompson
Jessica Walsh
@Jessica Walsh
Amanda Rodriguez
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Tyler Henderson
@Tyler Henderson
Tyler Henderson
@Tyler Henderson
Emily Foster
@Emily Foster

THE DAZUMA STANDARD

Uncompromising quality, premium materials, and expert service in every detail.
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AUTHENTIC MATERIALS

Genuine natural silk, solid brass, and artisan glass.

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QUALITY ASSURANCE

Rigorous 7-stage inspection for every fixture.

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EXPERT SUPPORT

Provide online chat and email support services 24/7.

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BESPOKE SOLUTIONS

Tailored dimensions and finishes for your specific needs.

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7,000+ DESIGNS

Curated collections featuring the latest architectural trends.

From everyday lighting to high-end statement pieces, Dazuma curates over 7,000 indoor, outdoor, and commercial lighting solutions. We also support B2B projects, custom designs, and complimentary catalog printing with featured Dazuma lighting.

Wall sconces outdoor lighting can give an entrance a clear sense of place while directing useful light toward a door, address number, sign, or walkway. The fixture shown here uses a round wall plate, a short curved arm, and a tapered bell-shaped shade. Its downward-facing opening creates a concentrated pool of light beneath the fixture rather than a glow in every direction.

The product images show the same compact industrial-inspired silhouette in dark black and warm bronze-toned appearances. A narrow neck transitions into a wider conical shade, giving the fixture a familiar utility-light character without looking overly rustic. The curved arm lifts the shade away from the wall, allowing the light to spread over house numbers, a mailbox, or a small sign. A round backplate keeps the mounting point visually simple and repeats the curved shape of the arm.

Only visible details can be confirmed from the images. Before ordering, review the listed dimensions, actual material, finish options, bulb or integrated light-source information, wattage, lumen output, color temperature, beam spread, voltage, dimming compatibility, weather rating, mounting orientation, electrical certification, and included hardware. The staged scenes demonstrate possible applications, but they do not establish the fixture’s technical suitability for every exposed exterior location.

What Defines This Wall Sconces Outdoor Lighting Style?

This wall sconces outdoor lighting style is defined by a compact gooseneck profile, a downward-facing conical shade, and a simple circular mounting plate. The fixture projects from the wall just enough to place light over the surface below it. Its visual character sits between an architectural sconce and a classic utility lamp, allowing it to complement modern, industrial, farmhouse, and restrained transitional exteriors.

The shade creates the strongest visual emphasis. It is narrow near the curved arm and flares toward the open bottom, producing a balanced silhouette that feels purposeful rather than decorative. Because the light source is visually contained within the shade, the illuminated wall and object below become more prominent than the bulb itself. Actual shielding and glare will depend on the shade depth, light-source position, mounting height, and viewing angle.

The images suggest at least two finish appearances. The black version creates a crisp outline against pale stucco, while the bronze-toned version feels warmer beside textured gray walls and wood accents. Confirm the actual finish names and color samples before ordering, since photography and screen settings can shift undertones. Compare related outdoor wall lighting if the project requires additional sizes or fixture shapes in a coordinated finish.

Where Does a Downward-Facing Outdoor Wall Sconce Work Best?

A downward-facing outdoor wall sconce works best above or beside a feature that needs localized illumination, such as an address number, entry plaque, service door, gate sign, or compact landing. It is most successful when the shade has clear space below and the mounting height keeps the light useful without exposing the bright opening directly to common sightlines. Broader areas may still require additional ambient or pathway lighting.

Above house numbers and mailboxes

The scene image shows the fixture centered above raised address numbers, an especially logical use for its downward beam. Light falling across the numerals can make the address easier to identify after dark while giving the entry wall a finished appearance. Position the shade so the illuminated area covers the entire number sequence, not just its center. Verify brightness and beam spread because reflective metal numerals and pale walls can appear brighter than dark, low-contrast lettering.

Beside an exterior door

Used beside a front, side, or service door, this sconce can illuminate the handle area and a portion of the landing while keeping the wall visually uncluttered. The shade should not project into the door swing or a narrow walking path. For an exposed front entry, confirm the required weather rating; for a covered porch, remember that wind-driven rain and condensation may still reach the fixture despite the roof overhead.

A single fixture can suit an asymmetrical doorway or narrow wall return. A matching pair works when equal wall space exists on both sides of the door and the architecture supports symmetry. Do not force two sconces into tight locations merely to create balance. One correctly positioned light plus a separate ceiling fixture may produce a more comfortable entrance. Review outdoor porch lighting when the landing also needs broader overhead coverage.

Hotel, restaurant, and studio signage

The image also shows the sconce above a small hotel sign, demonstrating how the focused beam can identify a business without a large internally illuminated box. This approach suits boutique hotels, cafés, restaurants, salons, creative studios, and reception entrances where signage is part of the wall design. Mounting position should respond to the complete sign width, letter height, surface reflectance, and normal viewing distance.

Commercial projects should test a sample with the real sign material. Polished metal, painted letters, carved stone, and printed panels reflect light differently. Confirm output, color rendering, operating hours, maintenance access, replacement method, finish suitability, and local sign-lighting requirements. If many fixtures will repeat across guest rooms or storefront bays, accurate mounting templates and consistent lamp color become especially important.

Courtyards, garden gates, and passageways

On a courtyard wall or garden gate pier, the fixture can mark an entry and highlight a small plaque without sending light in every direction. Keep branches and climbing plants away from the open shade so they do not block the beam or trap debris. In a passageway, review the side profile carefully: a projecting arm can feel intrusive where the walking width is limited. Use path or step lighting for changes in level that fall outside the downward pool.

How Should the Fixture Be Positioned Around Doors, Numbers, and Signs?

Position this fixture by starting with the surface or object that needs light, then work upward to the mounting point. Centering the body on a wall is less important than placing the beam over the address, sign, handle, or landing. Check the view from the street and walkway, keep the shade opening out of direct eye contact, and leave practical clearance from doors, trim, gutters, and plant growth.

For address numbers, arrange and finalize the numeral spacing before selecting the electrical-box location. The cone of light should encompass the complete address with some breathing room around it. A fixture mounted too close may create a bright hotspot on the upper numbers and leave the lower wall dark. Mounted too high, it may lose intensity or illuminate a much larger area than intended. Published beam information or a temporary test helps determine the best relationship.

When used beside a door, align the sconce with a meaningful element such as the upper section of the door, the center of the handle zone, or a horizontal trim line. Exact height depends on fixture size, door proportions, user sightlines, and beam direction. Tape a full-size paper outline to the wall and view it from the curb, entry steps, and interior. Include the visible projection of the curved arm, not just the backplate.

For signage, the fixture does not always need to be centered on the entire wall. It should relate to the sign itself. One light may suit a narrow hotel plaque or house name, while a wider sign may need two evenly spaced fixtures. If two beams overlap excessively, the center can appear much brighter than the ends. Review the real beam angle and sign dimensions rather than estimating coverage from the shade diameter.

Mounting on textured stone or irregular masonry may require a properly detailed flat block. The round backplate needs a stable surface and a weather-managed connection. Do not rely on a thick bead of sealant to compensate for large gaps or loose substrate. A qualified installer can determine how to secure the fixture without creating a path for water into the wall assembly.

Nearby architectural features can interrupt the light. Deep ledges, projecting caps, mailboxes, door canopies, and dense foliage may cut off part of the beam or cast distracting shadows. Photograph the wall at night with a temporary light source if the area is complex. This simple check often reveals conflicts that are not obvious on a daytime elevation drawing.

How Do Shade Shape, Wall Texture, and Light Color Affect the Result?

The conical shade concentrates attention below the fixture, wall texture controls the sharpness of the illuminated area, and color temperature influences whether the entrance feels warm, neutral, or cool. Smooth stucco tends to show a cleaner pool of light, while rough concrete and stone create broken highlights. Because the images cannot confirm beam angle or Kelvin value, compare the actual lighting specifications before final placement.

A deep shade can visually shield the source from someone standing in front of the wall, but the source may still be visible from below or from an uphill approach. The circular opening produces a naturally rounded illuminated area that contrasts with square doors, rectangular signs, and straight architectural joints. This mix of curves and lines is part of the fixture’s appeal. Actual beam edges may be soft or defined depending on the optic and lamp.

On smooth pale stucco, even moderate output can appear bright because the wall reflects more light toward the viewer. On dark brick, wood, or rough stone, the same fixture may create a smaller-looking, more textured effect. If accurate sign readability is important, test the fixture on the real finish. A sample board cannot fully reproduce the scale, texture, and surrounding darkness of the completed façade.

Warm white light often complements bronze-toned finishes, wood doors, earth-colored stucco, brick, and hospitality entrances. A neutral white can suit a black fixture on cool gray concrete or a minimalist commercial wall. Coordinate the Kelvin value with nearby landscape, soffit, and interior lighting visible through windows. Noticeably different whites can make a carefully designed entrance feel inconsistent even when every fixture looks attractive on its own.

Color rendering matters when the beam illuminates painted signage, plants, wood, food-service entrances, or colored logos. A generic LED label does not indicate how accurately these colors will appear. Look for published color-rendering information and review a sample for brand-critical applications. The light should make the sign legible without noticeably shifting its colors or overpowering the surrounding wall.

Brightness and controls should suit the actual use schedule. A hotel entrance may operate throughout the night, while a residential address light may run only during evening hours. Confirm whether the fixture supports dimming, photocells, timers, or other controls before planning around those features. Separate control from brighter security or area lighting allows the sconce to maintain a comfortable architectural role.

Which Exterior Styles and Finishes Suit This Sconce?

This sconce suits modern farmhouse, industrial, contemporary, and restrained transitional exteriors because it combines a familiar gooseneck arm with a clean, undecorated shade. Black creates strong contrast and relates well to dark windows or hardware, while a bronze-toned appearance can soften stone, stucco, and wood. The fixture works best when its finish and curved profile repeat at least one other exterior detail.

For modern farmhouse architecture, the conical shade recalls practical barn and workshop lighting without requiring a heavily distressed finish. Pair it with board-and-batten siding, simple house numbers, black-framed windows, and straightforward door hardware. Keep the scale modest if the architecture is residential; an oversized utility-style shade can dominate a narrow porch. Compare alternative outdoor barn lights when a broader shade or longer arm better suits the elevation.

On a contemporary exterior, the black version can provide a small curved counterpoint to large rectangular windows and flat rooflines. It feels less severe than a box sconce but remains simple enough for minimal spaces. Use it selectively above signage or beside a secondary entrance rather than covering every wall bay. If a fully geometric fixture is preferred, review modern outdoor wall lighting with flatter or more angular profiles.

Bronze-toned finishes can work well on transitional exteriors where black feels too stark. They often relate naturally to warm stone, wood doors, copper-toned details, and earth-colored walls. However, bronze names vary widely from dark brown to reddish or antiqued finishes. Request or review accurate finish information, especially when matching existing locks, handles, and railings.

What Should You Check Before Ordering and Installing?

Before ordering, confirm the sconce’s height, width, projection, backplate dimensions, material, finish, light-source requirements, output, color temperature, voltage, weather rating, and control compatibility. Inspect the proposed mounting area for an appropriate electrical box, flat support, drainage, and clearance from doors or walkways. These practical checks determine whether the fixture will fit and function; product photos alone establish only its visible design.

  • Measure the full projection: Include the curved arm and shade, especially beside narrow paths or outward-swinging doors.
  • Check the illuminated target: Record the size and position of house numbers, signs, mailboxes, handles, and landings below.
  • Confirm the light source: Verify bulb base or integrated LED details, maximum wattage, lumens, color temperature, replaceability, and included components.
  • Review outdoor suitability: Match the listed wet- or damp-location rating to rain, humidity, sprinklers, and overhead protection.
  • Inspect the mounting surface: Irregular stone, siding profiles, and shallow electrical boxes may require additional planning.
  • Verify controls: Confirm dimmer, timer, photocell, or smart-control compatibility rather than assuming these features are available.
  • Check glare: Review the open shade from the street, walkway, stairs, seating, and nearby windows.
  • Coordinate multiples: Use consistent heights, offsets, lamp color, and finish when repeating fixtures across a façade.

This product is best suited to homeowners, designers, and hospitality projects that need a compact downward-facing accent over a small sign, address, doorway, or architectural detail. It may be less suitable where broad ambient light is the main goal, where the wall cannot support the fixture’s projection, or where a glass lantern better matches the building. Compare it with outdoor wall lanterns when all-direction glow and a more traditional silhouette are preferred.

Professional installation is recommended for safe exterior wiring, stable mounting, weather-managed connections, and local code compliance. Follow the instructions for the exact model and wall type. When several fixtures are planned for a commercial façade or multi-unit project, install one sample first. Confirm its scale, beam coverage, finish appearance, glare, and nighttime brightness before repeating the electrical boxes and mounting holes.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this wall sconce suitable for an uncovered exterior wall?

It is suitable only if the exact model carries the required rating for that exposed location and is installed according to its instructions. A product image showing outdoor use does not confirm a specific wet-location rating. Check exposure to direct rain, wind-driven water, sprinklers, condensation, and snow. The electrical box, connections, wall penetrations, and mounting surface also need appropriate weather management. Ask a qualified installer to review the site when exposure is severe.

Can this light illuminate house numbers clearly?

The downward-facing shade makes it a logical option for house numbers, but actual readability depends on output, beam spread, mounting distance, wall color, number size, and contrast. Finalize the address layout first, then position the fixture so the entire sequence falls within the illuminated area. Reflective numerals may appear bright while dark low-profile numbers need more direct light. A temporary nighttime test is the most reliable way to confirm coverage.

How high should the sconce be installed beside a door?

There is no single height that works for every door and fixture. Relate the sconce to the door proportions, handle area, mounting surface, shade opening, and common eye level. Use a full-size template to evaluate both height and projection from several viewpoints. Keep the light clear of trim and door movement, and confirm that the downward beam reaches the intended landing or entry feature. Installation must also follow the manufacturer’s instructions and local requirements.

Does this fixture use a replaceable bulb or integrated LED?

The image does not provide enough information to confirm the light-source type. Review the product specifications for bulb base, included lamp, maximum wattage, integrated LED details, color temperature, and replacement procedure. If a bulb is used, verify that its dimensions fit inside the shade and that it is appropriate for the enclosure and exterior application. If the source is integrated, check driver access, rated life information, warranty, and service options.

Can the wall sconce be dimmed?

Dimming is possible only when the fixture or bulb, driver, wall control, and electrical system are mutually compatible. Appearance does not establish dimmability. Check the supported control method and approved dimmer information. For a commercial property, also review low-end performance, flicker, noise, and consistency across multiple fixtures. A qualified electrician can confirm the correct control before installation, preventing poor performance or damage from an incompatible combination.

Will the shade create glare?

The downward-facing shade may shield the source from some front and side viewpoints, but glare depends on mounting height, source position, brightness, shade depth, and whether people approach from below. A light mounted beside steps or above low seating can expose the opening more directly. Review the fixture at night from normal walking, driving, seated, and interior viewpoints. Lower output or a more diffused source may improve comfort if compatible with the fixture.

Can this sconce be mounted on stone or siding?

It may be possible, but the round backplate needs a stable and appropriately detailed surface. Uneven stone, lap siding, and textured panels can leave gaps or prevent the fixture from sitting level. A mounting block or prepared flat area may be required, along with correct flashing or sealing. Do not use excess sealant as a substitute for structural support. Have an installer familiar with the wall assembly assess the mounting detail before drilling.

Should I choose black or a bronze-toned finish?

Choose black when you want crisp contrast or need to relate the sconce to black windows, railings, signs, or hardware. A bronze-toned finish can feel softer beside warm stone, brick, wood, and earth-colored stucco. Confirm the manufacturer’s actual finish name and appearance because bronze varies widely and screens can distort color. Evaluate the fixture in daylight as well as under its own nighttime light before coordinating a large quantity.

WEIGHTS & DIMENSIONS

Color: Matte Black
Weight:0.99lb
Size:5.31'' Width x 9.29'' Depth x 3.35'' Height
Color: Silver
Weight:0.99lb
Size:5.31'' Width x 9.29'' Depth x 3.35'' Height
Color: Bronze
Weight:0.99lb
Size:5.31'' Width x 9.29'' Depth x 3.35'' Height

DETAILS

Product Type:Outdoor Wall Sconces
Power Supply:Hardwired
Voltage:110V
Power:10W
Style:Industrial
Light Source:LED E27
Color Temperature:Warm White (3000K)
Material:Aluminum
Finish:Black,Bronze,Silver
Control Type:Wall Switch
Mounting Type:Wall Mount
Ingress Protection:IP65
Indoor/Outdoor:Outdoor
Product Care:Turn Off the Power,Wipe Clean with Dry Cloth

DEAL

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