The trouble with the Hue bulbs is they require being constantly powered. There's no way to use a regular wall dimmer or switch with them. You lose instantaneous wall control (as in, walking into a dark room and getting lights *now*) if you use a wall control.
Philips makes a wall-mountable dimmer but, very oddly, it's NOT in a standard wall control size! That and the remote is entirely dependent on communicating with the RF bridge first and then sending commands to the lights. It's quick, but it's not "lights on NOW" quick.
It's a tough situation. Made worse by the fact that most light fixtures do not have constant power to them. You can 'work around' this by eliminating the switch wiring inside the wall box but then you're stuck with the light being constantly powered. Which is a downside if power goes out. Because, by code, all bulb replacement lighting must immediately turn itself on when power is applied. As in, someone put it in a light fixture controlled by a switch and they expect it to, y'know, come on when the switch is operated. Power going out in the middle of the night means ALL YOUR BULBS will turn themselves on. Yeah, not fun.
Meanwhile, Philips is trying to sell off that division. This while making some seriously bad judgement calls when it comes to supporting 3rd party lighting through their hubs. They basically arbitrarily decided to orphan using 3rd party bulbs through their bridge. They back-pedaled on this, somewhat, but it's still not been fully corrected. Dick move on Philips part.
Tangentially, there's the LED tape market. This is interesting. Lutron makes a series of dimmers and power supplies designed to work with low voltage controlled lighting. This is a common thing in the commercial market, but largely unheard of in residential. The idea is the power supply accepts two power connections. One constant hot and one 'dimmable hot'. This allows using a regular wall dimmer (for appearance and control quality's sake) to dim a DC-powered light. They make them in 12 and 24vdc variants, across a range of wattages. This gets interesting when you want high-quality 1% dimming with LED lighting. There's one catch though, it's single color only. They have no support for RGBW schemes at this point. They do support DMX but that's a whole other beast.
It's still sort of 'early days' when it comes to truly effective and well-integrated color lighting products. You wouldn't think it'd be this way, but it's still pretty crude to automate effectively.