I was wondering if you could point to some sources for elaborating on the bolded above.
Sorry for the late reply, somehow i completely forgot about this thread.
I am mostly refering to LED strips and panels.
Some examples for strips (it's a German site, but should give you the idea):
Simple white casing
In aluminium profile
As flexible self-adhesive strip
Such strips can be used in many ways. You can also get aluminium profiles especially for LED usage, that can take up standard flexible strips. They are nice for more indirect lighting purposes: put them high up on the furniture, pointing to the ceiling or wall. But they can be used for more direct lighting as well, of course.
Then there are LED panels. Those are basically tiles with an aluminium frame, the whole thing usually about only 10-12mm thick.
Here are some sqaure panels on eBay in various sizes
And here are smaller ones in sqaure and round to install for example in dry-walls, ceilings etc.
Those panels are just the first results on eBay that i found. With a little searching you can get them cheaper as well. I use such panels above my workplace. Made a thin wooden frame, fixed to the ceiling in some distance using steel wire (Gripple).
Then there are floodlights, ridiculously cheap from China,
like these here, 5 pcs. for about 29 Euros shipped. You can get them up to 100 watts. Of course, son't expect wonders from these cheapos. But they work sufficently well, i have a bunch of them in the "kitchen" here.
Don't be worried that for most strips and panels it says "not dimmable". This is not exactly true. Almost always they use an external power supply, while the LED's themselves are driven by a fixed voltage (for most strips and larger panels, they have current limiting resistors built in) or by constant-current supplies (often found with those smaller panels or floodlights). However, it's just a case of using a suitable power supply to get them dimmable, since, after all, it is just the supply that has to be dimmable.
A lot of creative stuff can be done with such strips and panels, since they are quite flat and thus require little space. Since they don't produce much, if any, heat either, they can be placed virtually everywhere. There is a difference between having a bunch of single bulbs in some fixture, or having literally a square meter or more of flat surface giving of the light, as can be done with such panels.
Greetings,
Chris
ETA: If you are up to it, you can assemble long strings made out of 3mm or 5mm diameter LED's and put that in the floor, for example between floor tiles or laminate. That can be used as some kind of "runway light", making a nice effect visually, plus, you can have the main lights all off and still see where you go. I have seen such strings ready-made in the past, but can't find them on a quick search.