FRANKBROS says
American designer George Nelson's 'Bubble Pendant' signaled a revolution in the Modernist lighting industry when it was first produced in 1952. Conceived as an affordable alternative to a set of silk-covered Swedish pendant lamps that had caught the designer's eye, the series of lights are defined by an assortment of organic sizes and shapes, and combine lightweight, rounded-steel frames with webbing polymer. The result is a family of soft, glowing light sources, that include this 'Nelson Pear Propeller Bubble Pendant' — a swooping, sculptural light that is characterized by angular twists on its shade.
Read more
FRANKBROS says
American designer George Nelson's 'Bubble Pendant' signaled a revolution in the Modernist lighting industry when it was first produced in 1952. Conceived as an affordable alternative to a set of silk-covered Swedish pendant lamps that had caught the designer's eye, the series of lights are defined by an assortment of organic sizes and shapes, and combine lightweight, rounded-steel frames with webbing polymer. The result is a family of soft, glowing light sources, that include this 'Nelson Pear Propeller Bubble Pendant' — a swooping, sculptural light that is characterized by angular twists on its shade.