Designed by Lambert & Fils Studio
The Clark Collection pushes the limits of form without sacrificing functionality. Bent metal creates shades that both block and reflect the lamp?s light source, casting light evenly. A marble anchor provides a contemporary touch to its surroundings.
Variation
$11,400
The Cliff Collection showcases the original materials from Lambert & Fils workshop. Natural brass and matte black rods provide structure for lamps. The finishing details add character and nuance to the lamp?s robust, functional forms.
$1,440
The Laurent Collection distills the milk globe to its essential relationship between circle and sphere. A series of thin forms compliment the Laurent globes?forms that carve through space, moving between line, surface, and volume. These forms combine in endless patterns, making it possible for an installation of Laurent lamps to inhabit any space with subtlety […]
$3,820
The main feature of the Waldorf Collection combines an open hemispherical shade with a cylindrical socket cover. This composite shade is deployed in suspension and wall-mounted configurations with natural brass and powder coated rods. Swivelling shades and other moving parts add functional flexibility to the crisp, streamlined forms of this collection.
$2,830
The Beaubien Collection?s strong black lines bend in and out of space, moving effortlessly between simplicity and ornamentation. Round and cubic brass connectors complete the lamps? structures and add a rich material contrast to the powder coated rods. The collection?s industrial and graphic aesthetic is imbued with a palette of influences, from traditional Chinese screens […]
$750
Like a powder case or a precious box, the mechanical action of opening or closing makes the object reassuring and immediately understandable. The light is diffused by a thick glass pane, throughout its depththickness. Inside, the polished brass flap acts as a pivoting mirror thanks to a visible hinge.
$620
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Lampe de Marseille was named after the Unit? d?Habitation in Marseille, the massive building designed between 1949 and 1952 by Le Corbusier and a symbol of Brutalist architecture.