Defining The Pendant

The New Pendant Lamp for Wästberg is a creative piece of work by Claesson Koivisto Rune. The lamp seems surprisingly small, yet tactile and friendly. Crafted from Sand-cast recycled aluminum, the lamp is environmentally sound and offer a good reason behind the imperfections of the metal. I love the use of a textile cord; it adds a dash of softness to the design.

Designer: Claesson Koivisto Rune


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W131 by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg

Stockholm 2013: Swedish designers Claesson Koivisto Rune used recycled aluminium to create these small and colourful pendant lamps for Swedish lighting brand Wästberg.

W131 by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg

The W131 lamps by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg are made from sand-cast recycled aluminium and fitted with halogen reflector bulbs.

W131 by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg

The lamps come in eight colours and were launched at this week’s Stockholm Furniture & Light Fair, which continues until 9 February.

W131 by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg

Other designs by Claesson Koivisto Rune we’ve featured include a lounge chair with a tiny white table attached and a renovated 19th century building in Stockholm – see all designs by Claesson Koivisto Rune.

W131 by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg

We’ve also featured lots of lighting by Wästberg, including 30 lamps created from modular parts by Japanese designers Nendo and unveiled in Stockholm this week – see all products by Wästberg.

W131 by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg

See all lighting »
See all products from Stockholm 2013 »

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Claesson Koivisto Rune w131

A pendant lamp is a very old concept. While Wästberg is a very forward thinking, high technological lighting manufacturer. So when designing a new pendant lamp for Wästberg you want to bridge past with present.

W131 by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg

First, the w131 is small. Surprisingly small. Equipped with reflector halogen it gives good light. So the lamp is extremely versatile as to where to use.

W131 by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg

Second, it is tactile and friendly. Sand-cast recycled aluminium is both beautiful and environmentally sound. Any imperfections of the metal are with purpose. The textile cord adds softness. We will use this lamp both at home and for contract.

W131 by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg

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Nendo. Illuminated for Wästberg

Stockholm 2013: Swedish lighting brand Wästberg has unveiled an installation of 30 lamps created from a modular set of parts by Japanese designers Nendo.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

Over thirty different lights have been set up in a room at an old skating pavilion in Stockholm to demonstrate the range of possible configurations.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

The W132 group of components includes a circular base, two poles of different lengths and three different shades.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

The shades can be used without light bulbs to make containers, flipped over to create uplighting or hung from the ceiling as pendant lamps.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

Long and short poles fit into the circular bases, shades and each other to create different stand heights that can be adjusted using circular keys.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

Additional parts can be added, including table tops and a bird cage.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

The installation is on display at the Skridskopaviljongen in Stockholm this week to coincide with the launch of a book about the collaboration.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

Nendo is guest of honour at Stockholm Furniture Fair, which continues until 9 February.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

Previous designs we’ve featured by the Japanese design studio include bowls so thin they quiver in the wind and glassware made from old Coca-Cola bottles.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

Take a look at watches they’ve designed for Noon at Dezeen Watch Store here.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

Our coverage of Stockholm Design Week so far includes glass bubbles that look like trees and chairs that can be dressed in different garments.

Nendo. Illuminated by Wästberg

See all our stories about design by Nendo »
See all our stories lighting by Wästberg »
See all our coverage of Stockholm Design Week »

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Winkel w127 by Dirk Winkel for Wästberg

Berlin-based product designer Dirk Winkel created this slim black desk lamp to show that plastic can be as solid and tactile as metal or wood.

Winkel w127 by Dirk Winkel for Wästberg

“One of the greatest things I was missing in typical designs made of plastic was a significant impression of substance, of materiality,” said Dirk Winkel. “Therefore the next step could only be a design that celebrated the actual material as it is, straightforward, solid and honest.”

Created for Swedish lighting brand Wästberg, the Winkel w127 is made from a fibreglass-reinforced bioplastic containing 60% castor oil from the castor plant, making it recyclable and more environmentally sound than crude oil-based plastics.

Winkel w127 by Dirk Winkel for Wästberg

The lamp also has a multichip LED, which distributes light more evenly than separate LEDs, and comes with either a flat base or a clamp base.

It was launched at Orgatec in Cologne last month, where Danish studio KiBiSi showed an adjustable desk that’s a cross between a car jack and an ironing board, and Dutch architects UNStudio launched clusters of triangular tessellating sofas. See all our stories about products launched at Orgatec.

Other lamps designed for Wästberg include architect David Chipperfield’s brass and rubber task light and designer Inga Sempé’s bowl-shaped LED pendant lamps.

See all our stories about lamps »
See all our stories about lighting »
See all our stories about Wästberg »

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Designer’s statement

When I started thinking about the design, I had the desire to challenge the perception and the common preconceptions of a material that is normally known to people just as ‘plastics’. I knew that I would like to go further than what’s the norm not only in terms of function and the look, but about the feel and tactility of the material as well. Soon it was clear that one of the greatest things I was missing in typical designs made of plastic was a significant impression of substance, of materiality. Therefore, the next step could only be a design that celebrated the actual material as it is, straightforward, solid and honest, with a concept of hiding nothing, but showing its innermost values to the outside. No second skin, no paint coat, the true, bold material in its pure form.

Technically, there was an equal desire to go for a high performance material that delivers the mechanical strength and rigidity for this product to last a long life while offering the possibility of doing large, solid cross-sections which are normally next to impossible in our chosen process of injection molding. The material that was finally fulfilling all these needs in an excellent way is a new development, giving us the desired tactility, the needed technical characteristics and the freedom of design.

Last but not least, making products out of plastic also involves being conscious of the responsibility for our environment. And the chosen material does not stop here: in this lamp, we are using a plastic that is based on over 60% biologically sourced material, which is castor oil, taken from the castor plant which does not compete with worldwide food production due to different agricultural requirements. Therefore the design makes a step ahead by setting the course for producing independently of mineral oil based plastics.

Technical description

Winkel w127 is manufactured of solid fiberglass reinforced biopolyamide. The material is recyclable. The mechanical solution is based on micro gas springs, widely used in the automotive and electronics industries. The gas springs have a lifespan of more than 50,000 compressions and give exceptionally good movement patterns. The shade is adjustable for universal direction of the light. The light technology is based on a highly energy-efficient multichip LED solution. This consists of a cluster of diodes instead of several separate diodes. By using multichip LED, so called multi-shadows are avoided and a very even light pattern is achieved. The diode is cooled efficiently with an advanced cooling construction. The fixture is equipped with both a reflector and a diffuser lens, to give optimal light distribution and light quality. In addition, there is a glare protection system to minimize both direct and indirect glare. Winkel w127 is equipped with a seamless dimmer that is operated by an IR-switch; a built-in timer automatically turns the lamp off after five hours. Winkel w127 is avaiable with base, clamp or pin.

Technical information
Material: fiberglass reinforced biopolyamide
Light source: 1–9 W LED
Light output: lm/W 84
Colour temperature: 3,000 K
CRI: > 90
LED life-span: 50,000 h

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W103s by Inga Sempé for Wästberg

W103s by Inga Sempé for Wästberg

Stockholm 2012: French designer Inga Sempé presents a collection of LED pendant lamps for Swedish lighting brand Wästberg at Stockholm Furniture & Light Fair this week.

W103s by Inga Sempé for Wästberg

The w103s uses the same shade as her 2010 desk lamp for the company, with a hook added to the top of the shade. Different combinations of colours and tones can be combined as separate pendants, arranged along a bar or coupled together on a hexagonal frame.

W103s by Inga Sempé for Wästberg

Inga Sempé is guest of honour at the fair, which continues until 11 February. See all our coverage of the event here and all our stories about Inga Sempé here.

W103s by Inga Sempé for Wästberg

Wästberg was founded in 2008 and has worked with designers including Claesson Koivisto Rune, Ilse Crawford and David Chipperfield.

W103s by Inga Sempé for Wästberg

See all our stories about them here. Wästberg also launch new products by Ilse Crawford, Jonas Lindvall, Antoine Laver- dière and Claesson Koivisto Rune at the fair. More details to follow.

Here are some more details from Wästberg:


During Stockholm Furniture & Light Fair 2012 Wästberg will be launching a new range of lighting – LED pendant lighting – together with both old friends and new acquaintances.

Four years after the company launch, Wästberg are now expanding their range. This new collection of dimmable LED pendant lighting is developed in accordance with the company manifesto “Lamps for Neanderthal Man” in collaboration with Inga Sempé, Ilse Crawford, Jonas Lindvall, Antoine Laver- dière and Claesson Koivisto Rune.

Sempé w103s

A w103 suspension can be a single hanging shade or a combination of shades. They can be attached on a long rail for linear combinations or on smaller rails, where they can be joined together like Meccano to create polygons. The rail structure is thin enough to avoid the feeling of a heavy, hanging structure, and the lines are also softened by the round shapes of the shades. These exist in 7 very different tones – bright, soft, clear, dark – and can be arranged in any colour combination.

Two elements of the w103 range table lamp are used in the suspended lamps: the shade is identical and the hook of the clamp is moved to the top of the shade. This then becomes the assembly piece of all the various shade combinations.

W101 by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Wästberg

Swedish architects and designers Claseeon Koivisto Rune will launch a task light made entirely of paper in Milan next week. (more…)