Louis Poulsen’s Patera 600 pendant light has a calm, matte white surface and a sense of delicate, mathematical beauty. Designer Øivind Slaatto drew his inspiration from the Fibonacci sequence that appears in nature as spiral patterns: the pendant consists of diamond-shaped cells arranged in a form that resembles the seed patterns of sunflowers and pinecones. When lit, the cells glow in a fascinating manner and also prevent glare. The intricate structure and the vivid surface make Patera a modern chandelier that is perfect for high spaces.
Patera 600 pendant, white
Louis Poulsen
Description
Louis Poulsen’s Patera 600 pendant light has a calm, matte white surface and a sense of delicate, mathematical beauty. Designer Øivind Slaatto drew his inspiration from the Fibonacci sequence that appears in nature as spiral patterns: the pendant consists of diamond-shaped cells arranged in a form that resembles the seed patterns of sunflowers and pinecones. When lit, the cells glow in a fascinating manner and also prevent glare. The intricate structure and the vivid surface make Patera a modern chandelier that is perfect for high spaces.
Product details (19)
- Material
- Cut matt PVC, matt-chromed brass, die cast acrylic
- Colour
- Matt white
- Width
- 23.62 in (60 cm)
- Diameter
- 23.62 in (60 cm)
- Shade diameter
- 23.62 in (60 cm)
- Height
- 22.72 in (57.7 cm)
- Bulb base
- E27
- Light source
- 13-16W LED (not included)
- IP rating
- 20
- Protection class
- II
- Voltage
- 230 V
- Nominal frequency
- 50 Hz
- Certifications and labels
- CE marked: tested and approved according to European standards
- Cable length
- 157.48 in (400 cm)
- Cable colour
- White
- Weight
- 12.57 lbs (5.7 kg)
- Canopy
- Yes (white)
- Ceiling plug
- No
- Dimmable
- No, but can be fitted with an aligned dimmer. In this case, please use a dimmable light bulb.
- Product ID
Designer
The Danish designer Øivind Slaatto studied industrial design at the Danish Design School in Copenhagen, graduating in 2007. Today he runs his Copenhagen-based studio Slaatto. He has done projects for companies like Bang & Olufsen, Le Klint and Louis Poulsen. Slaatto gets his inspiration from nature, but also mathematical principles.
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