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DMF builds what we consider the cleanest architectural downlights on the market. Their DRD2 and DRD4 trims sit so close to the plane of the ceiling that the fixture reads as a circle of light, not a fixture — and their finish quality survives painters, plaster crews, and decades of lifecycle without yellowing or warping.
Most residential downlights interrupt the ceiling. The trim is over-scaled, the bezel is wrong-finish for the plaster, and the heat sink protrudes into the cavity. DMF's DRD series solves all three: a 0.4-inch overlap onto the ceiling, color-matched powdercoat finishes, and a thermal design that lets us put the same trim into insulated and non-insulated cavities without changing housings.
We spec DMF on every project where the architect or designer cares about ceiling planes — which is most of them. The fixtures pair beautifully with Lutron and Ketra emitters when full tunable-white control is wanted, and ship with high-CRI fixed-temperature LED modules for projects with a tighter budget.
Compact 2-inch architectural downlight — wet-rated trims for outdoor and shower use, and a tool-free relamp design that respects the painter's work.
4-inch downlight with a wider beam selection and higher lumen output for great rooms, kitchens, and double-height spaces.
Continuous architectural cove and slot fixture system — used where Ketra is over-scoped but a Cove of Light architectural detail is needed.
Two-, three-, and four-aperture trims for gallery walls and corridors where multiple beams from a single ceiling cut deliver the cleanest result.
DRD2 trims aligned to the architect's ceiling grid — the trims read as paint, not as fixtures, and the corridor has perfect even illumination without scallops on the walls.
Wet-rated DRD2 trims directly over the shower stall — IP-rated, tool-free relamp, no visible bezel detail to collect grime.
DRD4 trims with wide-beam optics over the island, narrow-beam accents over decorative fixtures — every aperture matched to its task.
M-Series multiples washing the artwork from a single ceiling cutout — used where the architect did not want a stack of three separate apertures.
A reference-grade screening room and whole-apartment integration inside a 1929 pre-war — delivered under the strictest alteration agreement we have worked under.
Read the case studyA 12,000-square-foot three-structure compound engineered for the Atlantic — storm-hardened, off-season-monitored, and seasonally commissioned every spring.
Read the case studyThe modern luxury home runs 200+ connected devices. Most are secured with nothing but the default password their vendor shipped. We take cybersecurity seriously in a way that residential integrators historically have not — and we do it as a permanent service, not a one-time install.
Read the networking briefEvery device authenticated at layer 2, every traffic flow firewalled and logged. Four VLANs, no shared broadcast domain, explicit allow-list.
An off-site security operations center watches your network every hour of every day. Anomaly detection, DNS reputation, real-person escalation in under 15 minutes.
Written compliance report — firmware status, traffic anomalies, capacity planning — reviewed with you every ninety days. Nothing drifts, nothing is assumed.
Invisible architectural audio — the speakers your architect will not see, and your guests will never find.