Interesting comments about the Cree bulbs - I guess I missed them completely. I actually came here today to post good things about them. Perhaps HD redid them because they have a big thing saying "New!" and I don't think the previous batch even made it to my store.
We were discussing them in the Chat Room after another CTer found them at Home Depot. I had just been there looking for bulbs a few weeks ago and didn't see them, but after talk of them came up I went and looked again, and now suddenly my local HD had 130 of them in stock.
I have to wonder if they fixed some QA issues - because the couple of us from the chat room that tested them out seem pretty happy with them. If you go back a year or two on this thread, you'll see that I bought 35 or so of the UtiliTech bulbs mentioned early on - even though not well suited for it, I put them in all my cans because I needed something more efficient and wasn't prepared to spend $30-$50 per can for that many. All in all, I'm actually still fine with them - never had a problem with them; but when I tested them for downlights (over the vanities) I wasn't happy with them at all; and I tolerated them for uplights in chandeliers. Their directional light really was only good for the can light replacements IMO.
Well I tested out the current batch of Cree's from Home Depot - the ones with their "filament tower" or whatever they call it - and these are going to be my solution for both the down lights in our vanities and eventually the uplights in my chandeliers. Bathroom Vanity's alone account for 21 bulbs in my house... When compared side by side with an Incandescent you'll barely notice a difference. I am replacing 60W clear globes with the 40W equivalent 6W bulb and it's brighter than the incandescents, despite the lower rating. It dims as well as any LED bulb I've seen - getting pretty low. The color is a hair colder than the incandescents, but all in all I'm quite happy. Some reviewers complained about the dark spot in the tip - but if you compare it to a regular filament bulb, it's actually quite similar. I love that it doesn't have that unnatural globe look to it - it really does look like there's a filament in the middle. Just to clarify, I'm talking this one:
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Cree-6-Watt-40W-A19-Warm-White-2700K-Dimmable-LED-Light-Bulb-1-Pack-BA19-04527OMF-12DE26-1U110/203991778#.Uap8JaXLxrI
The other thing I hadn't solved for yet was ceiling fixtures. If you carefully read the packaging on LED bulbs, you'll find that most say they're not for enclosed fixtures; well ceiling fixtures in bedrooms and closets account for another 24 or so bulbs in the house - so another big potential savings... for these I finally found a suitable replacement as well. Lowes has another
Utilitech bulb - this one specifically says it's suitable for fully enclosed fixtures - and I've found it to be adequate - especially for kids' rooms and closets. Again, mine are replacing 60W bulbs and these seem to compare just fine even with the 40W equivalent rating.
This all started when we realized that at our kids' bath/bedtimes, our power consumption was tripling - because downstairs is all LED and upstairs was all Incandescent; so fixing these closed fixtures and vanity downlights should make a huge different on our power bill since we spend the majority of the month in the $.39/kWh rates.