Original design sconce NELSON BUBBLE
for officeLEDwhite

Original design sconce - NELSON BUBBLE - Herman Miller - for office / LED / white
Original design sconce - NELSON BUBBLE - Herman Miller - for office / LED / white
Original design sconce - NELSON BUBBLE - Herman Miller - for office / LED / white - image - 2
Original design sconce - NELSON BUBBLE - Herman Miller - for office / LED / white - image - 3
Original design sconce - NELSON BUBBLE - Herman Miller - for office / LED / white - image - 4
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Characteristics

Style
original design
Applications
for office
Light source
LED
Color
white
Designer
by George Nelson

Description

The entire family An assortment of lights in various spherical silhouettes, the Nelson Bubble Lamps add a touch of softness and luminosity to interiors. Designed by George Nelson in 1952, these elegant fixtures are fashioned from a sturdy, lightweight steel frame yet have a delicate, floating quality. Nelson was inspired by a set of silk-covered Swedish hanging lamps that he wanted to acquire for his office, but he found the price to be prohibitive. An ingenious and resourceful designer, he went on to create the first set of Nelson Bubble Lamps using a translucent white plastic spray, a technique developed by the US military at the time. Nelson drew from elemental, organic shapes in making variations like the Apple Bubble Pendant and the Saucer Pendant Lamp, among others. A tale of ingenuity An influential designer of mid-century modernism in America, George Nelson came across a set of hanging lamps from Sweden and loved everything about their modern aesthetic, except for their extravagant cost. “The Swedish design was done in a silk covering that was very difficult to make; they had to cut gores and sew them onto a wire frame. But I wanted one badly,” Nelson wrote in his book, On Design, published in 1979. Resin resonates A seemingly unrelated reference soon led to an intuitive idea. He recalled, “It was a picture in the New York Times some weeks before which showed Liberty ships being mothballed by having the decks covered with netting and then being sprayed with a self-webbing plastic.” Nelson located the manufacturer of this resinous plastic and used it in the making of the bubble lamps.

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