It is hard to make any make or model recommendations.

Your subjective preference and tolerance for the color rendering of a particular set of LEDs used in a specific make and model of lamp will determine how well you like the lamp. Some people don't seem to be sensitive to less than perfect lighting but others quickly suffer eye strain and headaches.

How you use the lamp will also make a difference. Diffuse lighting might allow a slightly off color rendition to get by. Whereas if your using the lamp primarily as a reading lamp your probably going to want much better color rendition. I use a small LED light, one with a decidedly blue tinge, for short-term task lighting. In that role the relatively poor color rendering is acceptable. If I tried to read for six hours using the same light I would suffer and go cross-eyed.

LEDs have gotten better over time. The best 'white' LEDs used to be decidedly blue. Now, the 'white' LEDs are much warmer and much closer to daylight, which remains the gold standard for color rendition. At any price point the 'white' LEDs are much whiter but the best are still slightly blue and you will have to pay for the best quality and rendering LEDs.

Some manufacturers have tried to mix in some red LEDs to compensate as an aggregate for the blue tinge. Some of these work better than others and a lot depends on the user.

The best advice is to decide how you will be using the light so you know how to weigh the importance of the color rendering. If your looking for a reading lamp be prepared to spend money. Once you know that the best way is to go out and try the lights.

Take a small print book you haven't read. Try reading with the light for a bit to gauge how it effects your eyes.

Also you might take a glossy magazine with a lot of bright colors and flesh tones. Under the light your testing do the colors look good. Do the flesh tones look right?

Some people have concluded that LED lighting is not good enough yet for protracted reading and task lighting. Compact fluorescent lighting has advanced to to be able to do this job but you have to buy quality and spend money to get it. A fifteen watt compact fluorescent with a high color rendering index may be your best choice if your sensitive to these issues.

Small halogen lights have excellent color rendering and the lamps are cheap. They are not as efficient as compact florescents or LEDs. They also produce considerable amounts of heat for lumen output. Efficiency and heat may be an issue but in very small watt units, 15 to 20 watts, the actual loss isn't much of a burden.