Nemo Tubes Large Ceiling Lamp
Ceiling and wall luminaries composed of two cylindrical elements in extruded aluminum, equipped with an opal polycarbonate lens for a diffused uniform light.
Ceiling version with a 340° rotation for the ceiling fixed element while other element adjustable by 90°.
Wall version with a wall fixed element and other adjustable by 60°.
Available in white and grey and white and light gold powder coated finishing.
Dimmable.
- Specifications
Total power 2x13W Emission double, orientable, spot
Switching dimmable TRIAC
Tension 220V Color temperature 2700K Luminous flux 2 x 1200lm Typ cri 80
Materials aluminium
Notes 90° / 340° elements orientabilit
Kindly note that this product is CE-approved only and should only be used in countries that follow and accept this standard. If it is used elsewhere it will be at the customer's sole risk, responsibility and liability.
- Size Description
Height.30cm
Width.max.25cm
Diameter 7 cm
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Charles Kapalkian
Charles Kalpakian was born in 1982 in Beirut (Lebanon). Holder of a BTS Design Produit in 2004, he did a product design apprenticeship within the Ora-ïto agency before joining architects Leberre and Guillois as design assistant in 2005 and 2006. He collaborated with Frédéric Ruyant, ChafikDesign and VeniseWorkshop as a desi¬gner and interior designer. He then worked for the Christophe Pillet agency as a designer, then head of the design team, from April 2007 to July 2011. Charles Kalpakian is currently a freelance designer working on projects ranging from furniture, product design, decorative arts and scenography. In April 2011, he participated in the ‘Making of ’ exhibition in Milan organised by Meet My Project. The same year he collaborated with Darenart on a light and vase collection and on the design of the logo for the ‘Colette’ restaurant by Pierre Gagnaire for the Sezz Hotel in Saint-Tropez. In September 2011, as part of Paris Design Week at ‘Docks en Seine,’ he presented the prototype for a wall cabinet inspired by bistable perception, currently presented in a larger, more vertical version known as ‘Kinetism I’ by Galerie BSL (edition of 12 pieces). Charles Kalpakian’s design has three roots: France, Lebanon and the culture of Street Art. These influences are evi¬dent in the reinterpretation of certain motifs from the history of decorative arts (such as French marquetry), and iconic motifs from Lebanese history and geography (such as Lebanese cedar wood), filtered by urban and contem¬porary culture. The stroke is still clean, even if the gesture sometimes resembles writing or calligraphy.