Finally, the Construction lamp comes from a brilliant curiosity combined with expert skills, industrial tools and a touch of playful passion for vintage construction toys.
A lamp characterized by a diffuser produced by the ancient technique of caged blown glass: the master glassmaker blows the glass bubble through a metal cage, which contains the natural expansion only in part.
Color: White Chrome
US voltage V110 on request.
A lamp characterized by a diffuser produced by the ancient technique of caged blown glass: the master glassmaker blows the glass bubble through a metal cage, which contains the natural expansion only in part.
Color: Transparent Gold
US voltage V110 on request.
Floor lamp h 140cmMaterials: lamp body in painted ABS. Multi-led diffuser in PMMA (polymethylmethacrylate). Base in painted die-cast aluminium. Stem in painted steel tube. Light source included: 1406 Mid Power Led 3000K CRI90 5000 Lm Power 30W (L). Touch switch with dimmer function. Power supply included. Cable length: 2m.
Floor lamp h 170cmMaterials: lamp body in painted ABS. Multi-led diffuser in PMMA (polymethylmethacrylate). Base in painted die-cast aluminium. Stem in painted steel tube. Light source included: 1406 Mid Power Led 3000K CRI90 5000 Lm Power 30W (L). Touch switch with dimmer function. Power supply included. Cable length: 2m.
Floor lamp S, (H. 111cm)Materials: lamp body in painted ABS. Multi-led diffuser in PMMA (polymethylmethacrylate). Base in painted die-cast aluminium. Stem in painted steel tube. Light source included: 252 Mid Power Led 3000K CRI90 1200 Lm power 9W. Touch switch with dimmer function. Power supply included. Cable length: 2m.
A lamp characterized by a diffuser produced by the ancient technique of caged blown glass: the master glassmaker blows the glass bubble through a metal cage, which contains the natural expansion only in part.
Color: Transparent Chrome
US voltage V110 on request.
The VL Studio family originated from a lamp designed by architect Vilhelm Lauritzen for Radiohuset (The Radio House, the headquarters of the Danish Broadcasting Corporation) in Copenhagen in the 1940s. The name "Studio" was chosen because some of the lamps were used outside the studio to indicate - with a red or green light - whether the recording was in...