Looks nice
Is halogen similar to incandescent?
McHrozni
Halogen IS incandescent, it's just that the filament is hotter than normal incans, and thereby whiter/bluer.
Halogen/incan spectrum is essentially black-body radiation, and for practical purposes similar to sunlight. The spectrum changes and shifts in a defined manner depending on the temperature of the emitter, hence you only need this temperature to know exactly how the spectrum looks, and which color rendition it has (hence "color temperature").
Fluorescent bulbs and LEDs have different spectra. CFLs start with UV light, which is then converted to whitish with the phosphor. LEDs start with blue, again converted with a phosphor, and there's always a strong blue peak in the spectrum of LEDs. The thing is, one can adjust this spectrum a LOT more than the incandescent black-body spectrum, and get a whole lot more tint variation. Exactly how the spectrum can be adjusted took a few years experimentation (hence early CFLs or LEDs having very unusual spectra and tints), and is still an ongoing process, in particular with LEDs. The spectra of CFLs or LEDs cannot simply be described by one single parameter like color temperature, but since the industry tries to emulate sunlight to a great degree, most sold bulbs are as similar to black-body radiation as possible, and labeled with the incan color temperature descriptions.
The label you have to look for is "warm-white" if you want to avoid bluish tints. The bluish is, however, better for certain physical work places, I found, and usually perceived brighter.
Some more of my observation:
1) LEDs are unsuited for medical examination of skin problems, even when warm white. If you need a light for that, get a halogen flashlight.
2) I have replaced CFLs in our laundry drying room with warm-white LEDs. Brightness and color tint appear to look similar at first, but I noticed that white laundry doesn't appear the clean bluish white glow it had before. Looks a bit yellowish. If you want to show off your tidy whities really tidy white, get blue/cold-white CFLs or really bright halogens

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And, frankly, the only lights I would go out and shop for general lighting purposes are LEDs. They're still somewhat expensive, but right now at a price point that you'll get the investment back with the lower power consumption and longer lifetime in a few years. And I expect the price to come down more, and the more people buy them the faster this happens. Normal incans are hard to get by now, in particular for high brightness, too breakable, and frankly, I really like how LEDs do not get hot like incans (which is a waste, and a general problem for safety and how it affects the surrounding of the lamp for me). CFLs are also too breakable, and have the nasty free Mercury when breaking and disposing.