Under the impact of the Milan Furniture Fair, have you already had the idea of purchasing a batch of new furniture? A gentleman at heart will definitely integrate his taste in life into details. For example, you will not let go of lamps, the finishing touch of your home. Do you want to know the new trends in lighting this year? Let this year’s Paris Home Furnishing Expo crack it for you.
Textured lamps
A new touch-sensitive product designed by Omer Arbel, a designer working for the Canadian company Bocci - 73 energy-saving lamps that resemble clouds floating in the sky. The designer said: "By making 73 energy-saving lamps, we have mastered the advanced technology of how to convert high-temperature glass into high-temperature resistant ceramic fibers. The finished glass not only shows the shape, but also reveals the texture structure of the fabric." With the development of today's lamps, designers seem to be more focused on the method of making new products than the new products themselves.
The LED light source is placed in the 73 energy-saving lamp, and then the chandelier is folded up. The long chandeliers are staggered, creating the effect of clouds. It is more flexible than a tree-shaped chandelier, and the entire lamp is more like a high-end custom-made art.
Lamps that look like sculptures
The Seed Cloud large-scale modular chandelier produced by London-based Ocher is like a sculptural installation. A small three-dimensional glass sphere hangs from each copper pendant, through which the tiny LED light source is greatly amplified. “It’s like putting copper eyelids on glass,” said co-founder Joanna Bibby. "Handmade products cannot have the feeling of large-scale production."
Sometimes a lamp is a work of art, embodying the hard work of the craftsman.
At this year's exhibition, his Plane chandelier plays with minimalist shapes and geometric figures - when viewed from any angle, it always looks like a solid ball. Dixon's Beat lighting series is designed as a hanging chandelier bundle of various heights, like a beautiful landscape painting. These copper lamps are hand-stretched and forged by skilled craftsmen in northern India.
This is a landscape, and this is also a lamp.
Pixel lamps
Blackbody is one of the few companies currently using organic light-emitting diode (OLED) technology. This year they collaborated with Thierry Gaugain, former design director of Philippe Starck. The I.Rain pendant lamp designed by Gogan can be installed with any number and shape of lamps, while the newly launched O Mi Kami tree lamp can be set to any size and uses a lampshade made of Murano glass.
Organic light-emitting diode technology is more commonly used in TV and mobile phone screens. It has the advantages of no glare, no heat dissipation and is easy to recycle.
Contact: mack
Phone: 13352972563
E-mail: mack@archled.net
Add: 3rd Floor, Building A, Mingjinhai Second Industrial Zone, Shiyan Street, Baoan, Shenzhen,Guangdong,China