the lights you have posted so far are all not very good.
I have not used blue and red lights in over 10 years - they are horrible to look at, produce bad growth and were only marketed as good lights 10 years ago because at the time only red and blue led's could be manufactured cheaply.
Times have changed. These days you want full spectrum which is a white light that produces all colours. no colour = black, all colours = white.
You can get different spectrums amongst the full spectrum, from 3000k to 4000k to 5000k to 6500k. 3000k has more red and yellow. 6000k has more blue.
Any spectrum is fine - 3500k is considered the optimum level of colour but any full spectrum will beat a blurple light.
Ikea are amongst the cheapest seller of full spectrum led's and they are decent but not the best.
I found a good light for your purpose if you can use amazon, have a look at:
Bozily Grow Lights for Indoor Plants Full Spectrum with Timer-75W COB CREE Sunlike Plant Light with 3/6/12/24H Timer 5 Dimming LED Sunlight Growing Lamp for Plants Seedling Blooming Fruiting [Upgrade]: Amazon.com.au: Lawn & Garden
I would have suggested you would need roughly 30 watts of a decent Led's so 2 of these lights for your area (20 watts each but can be adjusted to any level)
I bought the light myself beginning of the year - it's 3000k - produces a lovely sunset orange glow and plants are responding well to it. I know the description says 75 watts but marketers always overstate the led's capacity with the argument that 75 watt chips have been used however the chips can never be powered at 75 watts (or that is the equivalent of 75 watts of older lights like High pressure sodium) - it draws 20 watts from the power socket which is the important bit to know to compare it to other led's.