
Light Spring Single Wall Light
Overview
Design by Ron Gilad, 2011.
By FLOS.
Simple, spring-inspired shaping stands out in stark white. Light Spring's head can be rotated 45° on its vertical axis, to reposition illumination and visual orientation. The wall mounted, injection molded diffuser is constructed in methacrylate with a photo-engraved internal finish, and fixed to the body by a nickel-plated neodymium magnet. The head is cast aluminum alloy, with wall attachment in injection molded NYLON PA 6.6 white 20% fiberglass and canopy is in cast aluminum alloy. The body is in extruded calendered aluminum with a feed for 14 LEDs located in the canopy. The components are finished with a water-based paint.
Features
Eco Friendly
Specifications
Material(s): Aluminum, methacrylate, neodymium, nylon, methacrylate
Dimensions:
Bulbs: 14 X LEDs, 2700K, 336 lumens, CRI 80; 4.5W
Models
FU334309
Designer: Ron Gilad
Ron Gilad was born in Tel Aviv in 1972. Gilad graduated with a degree in industrial design from the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem, Israel. His designs are functional and minimalist to which he adds his humor, elegance and sophisticated wit. He likes to deconstruct the function of an object down to the basics. Frequently starting with a found object which is then reinterpreted into something else. Gilad taught 3D Design at the Shenkar Academy of Engineering and Design from 1999-2001, during which time he developed one-of-a-kind objects later exhibited at shows. He moved to New York in 2001 and co-founded Designfenzider from where he designs, produces and distributes his works around the world. He has also been teaching at the Pratt Institute in New York City since 2006. His works are part of the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Arts and Design in New York and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art.
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Manufacturer: Flos
FLOS was founded in 1962 are the Italian Lighting Specialists. The very same year FLOS began producing a number of lamps that were to become classics in Italian industrial design. These first lamps were Arco, Relemme, Toio and Taccia — all designed by Achille and Piergiacomo Castiglioni. As a tangible proof of FLOS Lighting's timeless design and technical excellence, these lamps continue to be produced today.
It all started with cocoon . . .
In 1959 Arturo Eisenkeil from Merano, an importer of
cocoon — a spray-on plastic coating produced in the United States - was tracking down possible applications for this new
material. He joined forces with Dino Gavina and Cesare Cassina and set up a company to produce lighting fixtures. This marked the
beginning of the long-standing association in the area of design with the Castiglioni brothers and Tobia Scarpa. The first cocoon
lamps ever created were the offspring of this collaboration: Viscontea, Taraxacum and Gatto by the Castiglioni brothers and
Fantasma by Scarpa.
FLOS moved from Merano to the province of Brescia in 1964: At first to Nave and then to the current premises in Bovezzo. Sergio Gandini became chairman of FLOS in 1965. In 1974, the company became the owner of Arteluce — one of the key Italian companies in the industrial design sector. Gino Sarfatti, an industrialist and designer, is the founder of Arteluce. Several models designed by Sarfatti himself have been incorporated into the product range.
From the very outset, FLOS has been characterized by its high-quality approach to lamp design and production. Many of the numerous lamps designed for the company, first by Achille and Piergiacomo, are undoubtedly some of FLOS Lighting's best-known and most successful products of industrial design. They have won awards and historical critical accolades, and are included in all the most important collections and design museums around the world.
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