I absolutely love LED bulbs, soft light throughout the living area and daylight in garage / work areas. An incredible reduction in my monthly electric bill. Started the conversion a few years back, have yet to replace a bulb, given their price I hope that trend continues
I couldn't agree more.
A few years ago, I stopped buying any other type of light bulb, and started slowly switching to LED bulbs. I became aware of a program offered by my local electric power company to provide about 20 LED bulbs free of charge. I had them come to my house and put them in. I first did my kitchen (six 65 watt BR-30 reflector bulbs) and my bathroom (eight 40 watt globe bulbs). Those old incandescent bulbs consumed a lot of power, and those two locations got frequent use. I was surprised at what a big difference that made in my monthly electricity bill. Since then, there's been no holding back. I'd say at least 75 to 80% of my lights are now LED. Indoors, they seem to last for quite a long time. Once I've changed out everything, I probably won't have to keep a handy supply of light bulbs, like I always had to in the past.
Every LED or compact fluorescent light bulb for sale includes on the packaging, something to indicate the color light it produces. It shows the color temperature in degrees Kelvin (below) and indicates the color of the bulb(s) in the package:
I strongly prefer warm colors, in the 2700 to 3000 K range. Other people seem to prefer something much further to white or daylight, on the right side of the scale. Learn what you like, and always check the label before you buy any new light bulb.
For what it's worth, after I had cataract surgery on one eye while waiting to get the other eye done, I realized how much cataracts had changed my vision. Everything had been blurred, darker, and significantly more yellow. I think people with aged eye lenses see everything more yellowish without realizing it. They seem to prefer the white or daylight light bulbs. YMMV