Description
A single, taper-sided bell of crystal-clear, hand-blown glass drifts from an almost invisible cable; inside it, a satin-white globe seems to pause in mid-fall. That is the quiet trick of Eugeni Quitllet’s Satellight. Because the cone and sphere never touch, light feels as if it’s radiating from nowhere—soft enough for evening meals, bright enough for a hallway, always free of glare. The LED module hidden in the “moon” glows at a warm 2700 K (CRI 90), dims smoothly on standard TRIAC or ELV controls, and lasts for years without a bulb change. All the supporting hardware—slender steel suspension, transparent power cord, glossy white canopy—recedes so the eye stays on the floating forms. Hang one over a café table, stagger three down a stairwell, or use the optional decentralization kit to let the cone wander off-axis; in every scenario Satellight brings a moment of weightless calm, equal parts design object and quiet night-sky poetry.
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