Skip to main content
Customizable
Elio Midi, Lychee | Table Lamp in Lamps by soft-geometry. Item composed of synthetic
Trade Member Offer Available
Customize this piece
Elio Midi, Lychee | Table Lamp in Lamps by soft-geometry. Item composed of synthetic
Elio Midi, Lychee | Table Lamp in Lamps by soft-geometry. Item composed of synthetic
Elio Midi, Lychee | Table Lamp in Lamps by soft-geometry. Item composed of synthetic
Elio Midi, Lychee | Table Lamp in Lamps by soft-geometry. Item composed of synthetic

Created and Sold by soft-geometry

soft-geometry

Elio Midi, Lychee - Lamps

Price $1,800

Creation: 2-3 weeks

Handmade

Woman Owned

Reclaimed Materials

Made In USA

Made To Order

DimensionsWeight
12.5H x 9W x 6D in
31.75H x 22.86W x 15.24D cm
4.99 kg
11 lb

Elio lamps are stacks of translucent, tubular, cast resin that mimic interactions of natural light on uneven transparencies. Inspired by an informal photo series documenting the play of light on glass, water, skin and dust, the lamps look to recreate a diffused glow through textured resin, using frosted sugar jellies as a visual reference. The lamp's tubular stack can be customized to different heights, and it's singular bend is a small ode to Eileen Gray’s Bibendum lounge. Integrated with smart wifi devices, Elio can be easily controlled by voice commands, via a digital switch on your phone, or it’s regular physical switch. Controls can be set up via the Smart Life phone app to be compatible with Siri, Alexa and other smart devices.

Item Elio Midi, Lychee
Created by soft-geometry
As seen in Creator's Studio, CA, CA
Have more questions about this item?
soft-geometry
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2019
Collaborative studio exploring softness in furniture and home objects

Founded in 2019 by Indian designers Utharaa L Zacharias and Palaash Chaudhary, soft-geometry is a collaborative design studio creating collectible objects around central theme of softness.Their work intersects forming new, contemporary geometries, textures and transparencies, with slow and imperfect hand-worked techniques. Zacharias and Chaudhary often reference these ideas from the rich visual culture and hand-crafts of their hometowns in India,and derive opportunities to bridge traditional and modern ways of making and seeing.