
"Floor lamps usually sit in the corner, trying not to be noticed until you need them. They're functional objects first, designed to throw light where you need it and stay out of the way the rest of the time. Most look like afterthoughts, with utilitarian bases and fabric shades that blend into whatever room they occupy. That works fine for ambient lighting, but it means the lamp contributes almost nothing to how a space feels."
"Alma Light's Totem I takes a different approach, treating the floor lamp as a vertical presence that can anchor a room rather than just fill it with light. Designed by Cristian Cubiñá, it borrows the idea of totems as ascending symbols and translates that into a tall, slender column of fluted glass. The lamp stands 150 centimeters high and only 15 centimeters wide, creating a luminous vertical line that projects light outward while occupying almost no floor space."
"The glass cylinder is the defining feature. Made from transparent fluted borosilicate glass, it catches and diffuses light through vertical ridges that run the entire length. The fluting gives it a subtle retro feel, like classical columns or vintage fluorescent fixtures, but refined into a single, clean silhouette. When lit, the ridges create soft striations of light and shadow, adding texture to what would otherwise be a simple glowing tube."
The Totem I is a 150-centimeter-tall, 15-centimeter-wide floor lamp that functions as a vertical architectural presence while occupying minimal floor space. A transparent fluted borosilicate glass cylinder houses a full-length T8 LED tube that emits 360-degree illumination, producing soft striations of light and shadow through vertical ridges. A circular iron base and matching top cap are available in textured black or satin bronze finishes to suit different interiors. The design references classical columns and vintage fluorescents but maintains a refined, minimalist silhouette intended to anchor and brightly illuminate spaces.
Read at Yanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
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