The Flat floor lamp is characterized by simple metal discs that generate horizontal light planes. The characteristic diffusers reflect the light on their surfaces, projecting a soft luminescence and integrating into the surrounding architecture.
The Flat floor lamp is characterized by simple metal discs that generate horizontal light planes. The characteristic diffusers reflect the light on their surfaces, projecting a soft luminescence and integrating into the surrounding architecture.
The Flat floor lamp is characterized by simple metal discs that generate horizontal light planes. The characteristic diffusers reflect the light on their surfaces, projecting a soft luminescence and integrating into the surrounding architecture.
The Flat floor lamp is characterized by simple metal discs that generate horizontal light planes. The characteristic diffusers reflect the light on their surfaces, projecting a soft luminescence and integrating into the surrounding architecture.
The Flat floor lamp is characterized by simple metal discs that generate horizontal light planes. The characteristic diffusers reflect the light on their surfaces, projecting a soft luminescence and integrating into the surrounding architecture.
The Flat floor lamp is characterized by simple metal discs that generate horizontal light planes. The characteristic diffusers reflect the light on their surfaces, projecting a soft luminescence and integrating into the surrounding architecture.
The Flat floor lamp is characterized by simple metal discs that generate horizontal light planes. The characteristic diffusers reflect the light on their surfaces, projecting a soft luminescence and integrating into the surrounding architecture.
The Flat floor lamp is characterized by simple metal discs that generate horizontal light planes. The characteristic diffusers reflect the light on their surfaces, projecting a soft luminescence and integrating into the surrounding architecture.
Sculptural, thin, reduced: two luminous panels form a parallelepiped, leaving room for an empty slot, but hiding the light source through an optical effect.
Sculptural, thin, reduced: two luminous panels form a parallelepiped, leaving room for an empty slot, but hiding the light source through an optical effect.
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...