Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvær

Product news: one coloured glass bubble sits within another to form these lanterns by Norwegian designer Kristine Five Melvær (+ slideshow).

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

Kristine Five Melvær‘s candle holders comprise a more opaque smaller inner bubble that holds the tea light, with a transparent outer layer that disperses the candle glow. Pairs of colours create a third hue where the layers overlap.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

During the lighter summer months the glassware can be used as vases for flowers.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

The Multi lanterns were developed with Norwegian glass company Magnor Glassverk and are on display at the Norwegian Centre for Design and Architecture until 25 August.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

Kristine Five Melvær has also created lamps that look like buds about to bloom and a series of sheer slik room dividers.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

The most recent candle holders on Dezeen include a chunky designs made from a compound of stone and resin and a series that look like bent pipes poking through a wall.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

Photos are by Erik Five Gunnerud.

See more candle holder designs »
See more design by Kristine Five Melvær »
See more glassware design »

Here’s some extra information from the designer:


The lantern Multi consists of two glass bubbles, one of them outside the other. The opaque inner bubble gives the light source an organic shape. The transparent outer bubble captures and exhibits the light. The two intersecting colors creates a new, more complex hue. Multi can also be used as a vase or as a light sculpture that interprets sunlight as color on the table. Multi’s function changes during the year. In the dark months the object glows. In the bright months the object displays the sunlight and flowers.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

Multi is exhibited for the first time as part of the exhibition On Time at the Norwegian Centre for Design and Architecture from the 21st of June to the 25th of August 2013. The exhibition is curated by Klubben (Norwegian Designers Union). It is an exhibition about time, situations and objects. Nineteen Norwegian designers interprets 17 moments within 24 hours through 17 brand new objects.

Multi lantern by Kristine Five Melvaer

Kristine Five Melvær developed the Multi lantern in cooperation with Magnor Glassverk, a Norwegian glass company. Multi will be developed further and launched as part of their collection.

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Kristine Five Melvær
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Tint room dividers by Kristine Five Melvær

Norwegian designer Kristine Five Melvær has made a series of sheer silk room dividers in pale, graduated colours.

Tint room dividers by Kristine Five Melvær

The tops of the Tint screens are strung between pairs of poles, while the rounded bottom corners are left free to waft around.

Tint room dividers by Kristine Five Melvær

“The dividers are forming semi-transparent, living veils in space, moving with the wind or people passing,” says Kristine Five Melvær.

Tint room dividers by Kristine Five Melvær

“They question the amount of shielding needed in order to create zones, as a fragile and organic counterbalance to rigid room dividers.”

Tint room dividers by Kristine Five Melvær

The project was presented at ™51 gallery in Oslo last week for an exhibition of work by Norwegian designers, called Tingenes Tilstand (The State of Things), where Kristine Five Melvær also exhibited a series of lamps that look like drooping flower buds.

Tint room dividers by Kristine Five Melvær

Photos are by Erik Five Gunnerud.

Tint room dividers by Kristine Five Melvær

See more work by Kristine Five Melvær here.

Tint room dividers by Kristine Five Melvær

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by Kristine Five Melvær
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Bloom lamps by Kristine Five Melvær

Norwegian designer Kristine Five Melvær has designed a series of lamps that look like buds about to burst into bloom.

Bloom lamps by Kristine Five Melvær

The Bloom lamps comprise canvas covers dyed in graduated hues and supported by a steel frame, suspended from the end of a bent metal tube like a drooping flower stem.

Bloom lamps by Kristine Five Melvær

“Like big drops, the shades may be associated with buds, fruits or water, while the seams in the construction are reminiscent of fibers. The steel structures have different heights, which contribute to the association of organic bodies,” says Kristine Five Melvær.

Bloom lamps by Kristine Five Melvær

The project will be on show at ™51 gallery in Oslo from tomorrow until Sunday for an exhibition of work by Norwegian designers, called Tingenes Tilstand (The State of Things).

Bloom lamps by Kristine Five Melvær

We met Kristine Five Melvær at Stockholm Furniture Fair in February, where she presented a series of jars with lights inside for showcasing treasured possessions.

Bloom lamps by Kristine Five Melvær

Photos are by Erik Five Gunnerud.

Bloom lamps by Kristine Five Melvær

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Kristine Five Melvær
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Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvær

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

Norwegian designer Kristine Five Melvær designed these storage jars and lamps to showcase small, precious belongings.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

She presented the Light Jars as part of the Greenhouse exhibition of young designers at Stockholm Furniture Fair earlier this month.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

The wooden stoppers conceal the light source and rise up to support the electrical flex.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

See more stories about Stockholm Design Week here and more lighting here.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

Here are some more details from the designer:


Light Jars

The family of Light Jars captures the light and displays it as the precious treasure it is. By placing beloved objects and trinkets in them, the lamps can literally be filled with personal meaning.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

The members of the Light Jars family all have different postures and proportions, but the same neck size. The lid holding the light source resembles the power plug on the other end of the cord, considering the poetic notion of power transmission as a life-giving source.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

Materials: Hand-turned oak, Mouth-blown glass, Textile-covered electrical cord.

Norwegian Designer Kristine Five Melvær investigates the subject of object communication, bridging the disciplines of product design and graphic design. She is focusing on the communicative potentials of objects as a means to create emotional bonds between object and user. By searching for the sensual essence of phenomena’s, she translates these qualities into sensuous objects with a scandinavian simplicity.