Reverse Table Lamp
Danish designer Aleksandar Lazic took inspiration from Italian marble tables of the 1970s in creating the Reverse Lamp for Audo Copenhagen. With its conical travertine base and curved, bronzed aluminum shade, the lamp diffuses light evenly across unworked stone, highlighting both natural imperfections and play of color. The biscuit-hued travertine profile is fitted with a dim-to-warm LED light source, making it an inviting and sophisticated solution for a number of lighting moods.
Cord: 78', Adapter includes US plug
Materials:
Travertine stone, Aluminum, PMMA Diffuser, Adapter
Dimming: Controlled on top of shade, dim-to-warm, 2200K - 2940K, 560lm Max
Electrical: 6W LED Panel, CRI >85
UL certified (ETL)
Returns must be approved by EyeSwoon and received new, in their original packaging. Return shipping is the responsibility of the customer. View our complete Return Policy in our FAQs.
Danish designer Aleksandar Lazic took inspiration from Italian marble tables of the 1970s in creating the Reverse Lamp for Audo Copenhagen. With its conical travertine base and curved, bronzed aluminum shade, the lamp diffuses light evenly across unworked stone, highlighting both natural imperfections and play of color. The biscuit-hued travertine profile is fitted with a dim-to-warm LED light source, making it an inviting and sophisticated solution for a number of lighting moods.
Cord: 78', Adapter includes US plug
Materials:
Travertine stone, Aluminum, PMMA Diffuser, Adapter
Dimming: Controlled on top of shade, dim-to-warm, 2200K - 2940K, 560lm Max
Electrical: 6W LED Panel, CRI >85
UL certified (ETL)
Returns must be approved by EyeSwoon and received new, in their original packaging. Return shipping is the responsibility of the customer. View our complete Return Policy in our FAQs.
About the Artist
Aliyah Sadaf
The evocative artwork of Chicago-based designer, Aliyah Sadaf brings a visual and tactile expression to any interior. As a master of detail and a connoisseur of materials, ingenuity is at the forefront but there is also a resounding simplicity to her mixed media creations that confounds expectations. The diminutive size of her work explores the interplay of scale and proportion, allowing a room to unfold as it wants to—moment to moment, mood to mood.