My Walk-In Closet Has New Lighting! (Plus, How To Patch Holes In Drywall)
I spent all weekend finishing up the lighting in my walk-in closet. This turned out to be a much more involved process than I had initially thought it would be, but the payoff is pretty amazing!! I ended up having to crawl into the attic about ten more times to get it all finished, but it’s done!
I shared the first part of this lighting installation process last Thursday when I cut the holes for the new slim canless LED downlights that I wanted to install. I shared that process in last Friday’s post. I love these lights because they’re only 1/2-inch thick. And since they don’t include that big housing that extends into the attic like the old school recessed lighting does, you can install them virtually anywhere, including directly under a ceiling joist.
If you missed the first part of this lighting installation, you can see that here: Adding Recessed Lights To My Walk-In Closet (Plus, My Workaround For My Phobia)
I like the Halo brand, but there are several brands of canless LED downlights to choose from. And I always buy the ones that have several different light/temperature settings because I like to set mine to the daylight (5000K) setting so that my colors aren’t distorted. Here’s what the lights look like.

And once you cut the hole in the drywall, the light is held in place inside that hole with those two metal spring clamps (the orange tabs).

Each light comes with this metal housing for the wires. After removing one of the round metal knockout holes in the housing, I added a wire clamp to the hole (which I had to purchase separately). And after stripping the yellow plastic sheathing from the wires, and then stripping about 5/8″ of sheathing from the ends of the black and white wires, I inserted the wires into the housing through the wire clamp.

And then I separated out the wires so that the black wires were together, the white wires were together, and the bare copper wires were together. I have two of each coming from the ceiling because one wire is coming from the center light (i.e., the original light in this room) to feed electricity to this light, and the other wire is going from this light to feed power the next canless light.

If you’re only installing one single canless light in a room, you’ll only have one wire coming from the ceiling. I was installing seven canless lights all daisy chained together, so each light had two wires coming from the ceiling except for the very last (seventh) light in the chain.
Then I used a wire nut to attach all of the black wires together (three black wires — the black wire inside the canless light housing plus the two wires coming from the ceiling). Once I tightened the wire nut as tight as I could get it, I gave a little tug on the smaller black wire coming from the canless light housing to make sure that it’s secure. Sometimes those smaller wires don’t get securely twisted into the wire nut when wiring it with two 12-gauge wires. If it pulls out with a slight tug, I know I have to remove the wire nut and try again until it’s secure. I repeated that process for the white wires and the bare copper wires.

I always use electrical tape around the wires and the wire nut on the white wires and the black wires.

And then I carefully tucked all of the wires into the housing and put the cover on the housing.

I placed the housing in the attic on top of the drywall and reconnected the light. Then I was ready to slip those two metal prongs up into the hole to secure the light to the ceiling.

How to repair a hole in drywall
If you’ll remember, I had to cut three additional holes in the drywall so that I could get the wires across to where they needed to go in this area of the room where the roof was too low for me to do the wiring from inside the attic. Plus, I moved the center light over about six inches. So that meant that I had four holes that needed to be repaired in the ceiling drywall.

Those holes were six inches in diameter, so for each hole I needed to repair, I cut a piece of scrap plywood to 10 inches long. You can use any scrap wood for this.

I placed it into the hole so that it spanned the center of the hole and extended two inches past the hole on each side.

And then I secured that in place using two drywall screws.

That piece of wood gave me something to then screw the center drywall to. Fortunately, I didn’t have to cut new pieces of drywall for this. I had saved the round pieces that I had to cut out of the drywall, so I just used those. But if you’re repairing a random hole in your drywall, just cut the hole in the drywall so that it’s a very neat circle or rectangle and then cut a new piece of dywall to fit inside that circle or rectangle.

Then I used this 10-inch drywall mud knife…

And I spread some pre-mixed drywall mud over and around the area I wanted to repair.

I placed four strips of drywall tape into that wet mud to completely cover the edges of the circle as well as the screw holes from screwing the wood piece into place…

And then I used the drywall knife to smooth out and remove all of the excess mud.

I left the repaired holes like that to dry for a few hours while I installed the lights.

When I was finished installing the lights, the drywall mud on these repaired areas was dry, so I went back over them with another layer of drywall mud to cover over the tape. I still need to sand those areas smooth, but once they’re sanded, I don’t think anyone will ever know there were additional holes there.
I also swapped out the original switch for a dimmer switch, and then I added a separate switch for the sconces.

In order to run that new wire for the sconces, I had to cut another hole in the top of the wall to feed the wires through. When I initially tried to feed the new wire down from the attic, there was a random piece of wood in the way inside the wall that wouldn’t allow the wire to pass through. So I had to cut the hole in the wall to remove that rogue piece of wood (it was a random piece of shiplap that had splintered off and was blocking the hole) out of the way to make room for the new wire from the sconces to pass through the hole coming from the attic. So I now have yet another drywall repair to do. 😀

All of that took quite a bit of time but just look at the payoff! I went from having one dim light to light this room to now having all of this light!

I also installed the center chandelier, but don’t pay much attention to that right now. That light is going to get a pretty big makeover, so it won’t look anything like that once it’s finished. And of course, it will be hanging over the center island, which I still have to build.

The sconces are on a separate dimmer switch, so I can keep those lights on as a nightlight if I want to. All of the lighting is LED, so they don’t use much electricity at all.

But y’all. Seriously. Check out all of this light!

Here’s what it used to look like with that one awful light on the ceiling fan.

And here’s what it looks like now…

See how the old light makes the color of the cabinets looks so dingy?

That’s why I like daylight bulbs! I can’t stand for lighting to make my pretty colors look dingy. So there’s no more dingy color in this room.

And I just love these little flower sconces.

I had originally planned to wire all of the lights to one light switch. I’m so glad I went to the trouble of putting these lights on a separate switch.

Anyway, I can mark off one more project from my list. And this was a pretty big project!

What an amazing difference good lighting makes!

Here’s one more look at the before…

And here’s the amazing after with all the new lighting…

Next up…THE FLOORS! I can’t wait to get this dark stain off of the floors and see what a difference the lighter, brighter floors will make in here and in the rest of the bedroom suite. I’m hoping I can get to the sanding today, but I’ve got quite a bit of cleaning up to do before I can rent the sander and start sanding. We’ll see how it goes!


Buy a few extra ceiling lights for future replacements now while you can find them.
I second this! Occasionally you’ll find LED things don’t last as long as promised and are more sensitive. Halo re-does their lights frequently. Having an extra lets that be an easy swap with minimal adjustments or rewiring since it uses the same connectors. You may get a slightly different color from a fresh fixture because I found LEDs do dim with use.
It’s so light and bright in the closet now! You’re making great progress. My husband cut 5 holes in drywall to install wiring for a chandelier in our library and he’s a perfectionist at repairing drywall. All the mudding and sanding took time but paid off. No one can tell where the holes were. I know yours will be perfect!
Just wanted to say I appreciate you taking the time to go into the details of the dirty stuff. I love all the details about the pretty stuff as well but as a diy’er I need to know how to get from point A to B. Thank you!
That looks like a lot of work but wow what a payoff! I can see it was a 2-soda install! Haha.
Haha! Since the Sonic close to our house closed, Bush’s Chicken is now my unsweet tea supplier. 😀 And I have to admit, it was more like a 4-tea install over two days. 😀
LOL! I honestly zoomed in and wondered what happened to your love for Sonic. Sorry they went out of business. Glad you found something to fill the gap.
So awesome!
Kristi it looks amazing and YOU are amazing!! Nice work!!!!
I am so in awe of you. You are such an inspiration!
ISN’T she !! I have gained SO much confidence in my own ability to do my own DIY – my husband is most impressed 🙂
You’re truly astonishing! Everything looks great. Cant wait to see the finished room.
Oh Kristi, its coming together so beautifully!
WOW!!! Let there be light. I love it. You make it seem so easy too, which I really like. It’s not hard, you just have to know what you are doing, and you do girl, you rock. Drywall work is one of my favorite things, it usually means I am getting to the end of a project when the spackle comes out. Love how it makes the room look so high-end and the color is right.
Cheers to you and Matt!
Everything looks wonderful. The only other thing I would want in a room like this is a full size mirror just to make sure everything is hanging properly on me and nothing is showing that shouldn’t be showing.
Kristi has said the full length mirror will be in the entryway to the bedroom suite, no worries about not having a full view of her outfits. 🙂
Are you still going to install the tape lighting? If so, are you going to hardwire those into a switch as well such as the sconces?
I am! I bought the tape lights yesterday. I’ve decided that I won’t hardwire them. I have two outlets available — one under the bottom shelf on each cabinet flanking the wallpapered cabinet section. And the lights came with a remote. I’ll just use that. Actually, I probably won’t ever turn them off. The ones I have in the open shelves of the hallway bathroom have been on continuously for years. I like the nightlight effect of them.
That looks amazing I love the way the trim sets off the wallpaper and your paint color is perfection.
As far as lighting, you are not alone, I have been a daylight lighting fan for years. I could never stand the yellow tint from the ‘soft white’ bulbs. My kids tease me about my surgical lighting, but to me the yellow tint makes things look dull and dingy.
FYI For lamp lighting, Costco’s LED light bulbs now have an adjustment so they can be set to what ever Kelvin level you want. Saves them shelf space so they don’t have to stock two types of bulbs.
Congratulations. Well done. It’s all beautiful.
Maybe your old light/fan would work in your shop. Might be nice to have a spot with a fan to keep some air moving on hot days, as long as it’s not kicking up dust for any wet finish projects.
Advise to buy extra lights for future malfunctions sounds valid. I did that for our porch & kitchen projects. Manufacturers seem to always tweak their models.
Now I see why you chose that paint colour. What a beautiful room! You never cease to amaze me! Such talent! Such a hard worker! Incredible vision!
I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve compared the before and after lighting pictures. Such a huge difference! Love it!! (Confession: I do wish the mirror had been a little taller or could have been hung a little higher.)
Gosh – you are the absolute QUEEN of DIY – I am in awe of your abilities. You have such a positive, determined and inspiring outlook and I love that you don’t settle till you have accomplished what you had your heart set on.. I love the ambience the new lighting has provided. (lol – my claustrophia kicked in as soon as I read your challenge with the attic space)
Cannot wait to see the closet once you have completed it –