Little Chrysalis Table Lamp by Ango

Small version of My Chrysalis; a bizarre and beautiful luminaire by the team at Ango. Made with individual silk cocoons which give the lamp an incredible texture for the light to escape through all held up by a minimal hand finished stainless steel base. 

The low impact and low energy intensive process of how Thai brand Ango creates its designs is representative of their view of how enlightened, environmentally responsible 21st century design and production can be.

Details
  • Category
    Table Lamps
  • Range
    Ango
Specs / Details

Materials

Base: Hand finished stainless steel
Diffuser: Silk cocoon 

Dimensions

 (ø) 250mm x (H) 250mm 

Lamp Base Type

E27/E26 screw fitting

Lamp Type

LED filament 4W

Listing

cUL

Lighting Solutions
Auckland
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About the
Seller

Lighting Solutions work with professionals in the architecture and design industry to catapult their projects to the next level, with premium customizable lighting systems, supporting innovative application ideas and visual solutions to enhance communication and space.

Our approach to light is to allow it to draw attention to surrounding spaces, volumes and objects creating connections between them. Our approach to people is to connect, allowing time to listen and understand their needs or vision to establish a thread that guides the project from concept to completion and beyond.

Since 2006 the small team at LightingSolutions steadily delivered solutions that exceed expectations offering a comprehensive service to professionals looking for cutting edge concepts with exceptional execution.

With more than 30 years of experience in the industry, we are the New Zealand agent of historical and innovative Lighting brands including:

Leucos | De Majo | Luce&Light | Cariboni | Macrolux | Formalighting | Next | Karboxx | Fivep | Ango

We found clients eager for the skills, insight, creativity and leadership we can offer and continually strive for more.

“It really seems that the light source is still a reminder of the origins of things. Even if it no longer illuminates the family circle, dispersed and multiplied, it is still the sign of a privileged intimacy, attributes a particular value to things, creates shadows, invents presences ” Jean Baudrillard, Le système des objects, 1968.