Louis Poulsen’s PH 3-2½ is an elegant wall lamp for both indoor and outdoor use, perfect for lighting up the entrance or terrace. The black-coated PH 3-2½ is a member of the PH lamp family based on a three-shade system developed in the 1920s by Poul Henningsen. The three-layered glass shade fills the space with glare-free light that is both soft and bright at the same time. PH 3-2½ wall lamp is made of spun stainless steel and aluminium, and equipped with a shade holder made of form-pressed glass.
PH 3-2 1/2 wall lamp, black
Louis Poulsen
Description
Louis Poulsen’s PH 3-2½ is an elegant wall lamp for both indoor and outdoor use, perfect for lighting up the entrance or terrace. The black-coated PH 3-2½ is a member of the PH lamp family based on a three-shade system developed in the 1920s by Poul Henningsen. The three-layered glass shade fills the space with glare-free light that is both soft and bright at the same time. PH 3-2½ wall lamp is made of spun stainless steel and aluminium, and equipped with a shade holder made of form-pressed glass.
Product details (18)
- Material
- Shades: spun stainless steel. Shadeholder: form pressed glass. Wall box: die cast aluminium. Wall box cover: spun aluminium. Arm: stainless steel.
- Colour
- Black
- Width
- 28.3 cm
- Depth
- 33.6 cm
- Diameter
- 28.3 cm
- Height
- 23.9 cm
- Bulb base
- E27
- Light source
- 7-9W LED (not included)
- IP rating
- 44
- Protection class
- I
- Voltage
- 220–240 V
- Nominal frequency
- 50–60 Hz
- Certifications and labels
- CE marked: tested and approved according to European standards
- Weight
- 2.4 kg
- Dimmable
- No, but can be fitted with an aligned dimmer. In this case, please use a dimmable light bulb.
- Hardwired wall mount
- Yes
- Notes
- Wall plate diameter 12.1 cm
- Mounting
- Terminal block: 1 x 3 x 2.5mm². Cable entries: 2 x bottom + 3 x rear entries for Ø 10-14.5 mm cable. Looping: Approved, max. 3 x 1.5 mm².
- Product ID
Designer
Poul Henningsen (1894-1967) was a famous Danish designer who studied at the Technical School at Frederiksberg, Denmark, from 1911 to 1914, and then at the Technical College in Copenhagen from 1914 to 1917. He started practicing traditional functionalistic architecture, but over the years his professional interests changed to focus mainly on lighting which is what he became famous for.
He also expanded his field of occupation into areas of writing, becoming a journalist and an author. His lifelong collaboration with Louis Poulsen Lighting began in 1925 and lasted until his death. To this day, Louis Poulsen Lighting still benefits from his genius. Poul Henningsen was also the first editor of the company magazine “NYT”. Poul Henningsen’s pioneering work concerning the relations between light structures, shadows, glare, and color reproduction – compared to man’s need for light remains the fondation of the lighting theories still practiced by Louis Poulsen Lighting.
Read an article about Poul Henningsen >
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