Designed by Katerina Handlova
Bomma?s meticulously crafted leather and horsehair surrounding firmly embraces its hand-blown crystal elements. This unconventional romantic bond celebrates a world of contradictions and the permanent essence of glass. The original design of this collection combines two absolutely precise crafts ? perfect leather processing and traditional glassmaking. While the object encased in black leather provokes with its strong bondage aesthetic, the natural-brown version at once highlights both the solidity and fragility of glass. Tied-Up Romance transcends the meaning of lighting to yet another level.
Variation
$1,850
Shibari is not simply the technique of tying objects with ropes, but a method of communication within hidden systems of lines and loops. In Japanese it?s called Kinbaku: the beauty of tight binding. This sophisticated collection places crystal centerpieces amidst the knots to draw our attention and create variable compositions. Thanks to BOMMA?s daring design, […]
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Suspension lamp in aluminum, composed of a slender structure with three light points and diffusers that can be selected according to different versions. Spot version available for punctual lighting, version with spherical diffuser in opal blown glass and version with a metallic cone in burnished gold and black finish that allows more light diffusion.
$500
Space Copenhagen?s ambition was to design a lamp with a simple industrial feel, but which was still elegant and poetic. The Copenhagen Pendant is an exercise in contrasts. Combining the classic and the modern, the maritime and the industrial.
$3,910
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 […]
$7,110
The name chosen for this Bomma collection, inspired by basic geometric shapes, comes from the Greek word for ?appearances.? According to Plato?s teachings, phenomena are mere transient images of eternal and perfect forms and thus inherently unreal. A fitting name for objects made of glass ? a material that is both rigid and flexible, as […]