Premium ProductReports
Comparison

Sonneman Constellation Chandelier vs Everly Quinn Tiered Crystal Chandelier

Updated July 2026

We may earn a commission when you buy through links on this page — it never affects our scores or picks. How we make money.

Quick Winner: Everly Quinn Tiered Crystal Chandelier

Light-quality-and-convenience versus long-term repairability: integrated LED wins on consistency, but a bulb-based fixture is the safer decades-long bet — and the smarter pick for most primary fixtures.

Sonneman Constellation Chandelier

Sonneman

Sonneman Constellation Chandelier

$4,500
6.9
Full report
Winner
Everly Quinn Tiered Crystal Chandelier

Everly Quinn

Everly Quinn Tiered Crystal Chandelier

$700
7.6
Full report

Score comparison

MetricChandelierChandelier
Performance9.08.0
Reliability8.07.0
Build Quality9.07.0
Warranty6.07.0
Serviceability8.08.0
Value3.08.0
Premium Justification5.08.0

Specifications

Sonneman Constellation Chandelier

Style
Modern/sculptural LED sputnik-linear hybrid
Material
Metal hub-and-arm frame (satin nickel), acrylic lens diffusers
Number of Lights
Modular — 13-light and 44-light configurations available
Bulb Type
Integrated LED, 3000K color temperature
Dimmable
Yes
Dimensions
44-light version approx. 93 in. W x 22 in. H; smaller configs 25-46 in. wide
Adjustable Hang
Yes, adjustable cable (up to approx. 240 in. on some listings)
Warranty
1-year limited manufacturer warranty (standard for the brand; verify per listing)

Everly Quinn Tiered Crystal Chandelier

Style
Multi-tier cascading crystal, statement/maximalist
Material
Metal frame with extensive teardrop/faceted crystal drops (156 crystals on a comparable large SKU)
Number of Lights
9-10+ depending on SKU (Emmin 10-light, Mamuni 9-light)
Bulb Type
Standard base, dimmable-compatible; some SKUs offer integrated LED — verify per listing
Dimmable
Yes, generally
Dimensions
Described by owners as "HUGE"; exact diameter/height varies by SKU, confirm on listing
Adjustable Hang
Yes, typically supplied with extra chain/cable for high-ceiling drop
Foyer/Sloped-Ceiling Suitability
Explicitly designed for two-story foyer and great-room volume

The verdict

This is a real engineering trade-off, framed by two very different fixtures. Integrated LED (the Sonneman Constellation) wins on light-quality consistency, energy efficiency, and never sourcing or color-matching a bulb — but its whole light engine ages together, so a dimming or failing LED means servicing or replacing the entire (expensive) fixture rather than swapping a $5 bulb. Bulb-based fixtures (the Everly Quinn tiered crystal) let you choose warm or cool color, dim easily, and replace individual bulbs for years, which for a primary, decades-long fixture is the more forgiving long-term ownership model. Unless you specifically trust the LED brand’s driver quality and want the cleanest light, the bulb-based option is the safer bet for a fixture you’ll live with for a long time — so the Everly Quinn takes it. (And at a fraction of the Sonneman’s price, the decision is easier still for most buyers.)