The Panthella lamp emits a soft, glare-free and comfortable lighting. The opal acrylic screen gives off a pleasant atmosphere of diffuse light for the translucent screen, the reflection down from the inner screen and the reflection from the funnel stem.
EU voltage
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Table /floor lamp with diffused light not dimmable. Galvanized metal frame. Central sphere in transparent blown glass. Internal sphere in glossy white blown glass. Upper semi-sphere in coloured transparent pulegoso blown glass. Black power cord, switch and plug.European plug two poles.
Table /floor lamp with diffused light not dimmable. Galvanized metal frame. Central sphere in transparent blown glass. Internal sphere in glossy white blown glass. Upper semi-sphere in coloured transparent pulegoso blown glass. Black power cord, switch and plug.European plug two poles.
Designed by Gae Aulenti and Piero Castiglioni in 1980, the Parola lamp features three different kinds of glass working processes: blown glass, natural glass and natural crystal. It is an exemplary model of technical integration between artisan and industrial skills.
Table /floor lamp with diffused light not dimmable. Galvanized metal frame. Central sphere in transparent blown glass. Internal sphere in glossy white blown glass. Upper semi-sphere in coloured transparent pulegoso blown glass. Black power cord, switch and plug.European plug two poles.
Table /floor lamp with diffused light not dimmable. Galvanized metal frame. Central sphere in transparent blown glass. Internal sphere in glossy white blown glass. Upper semi-sphere in coloured transparent pulegoso blown glass. Black power cord, switch and plug.European plug two poles.
A magical and poetic project with an essential design, but of great scenic presence, which recalls the work of the great glassmakers of the last century.
Voltage 100-240V/48V
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...