Description
design | 1924, Wilhelm Wagenfeld |
material | Glass plate and glass tube made of clear glass, metal parts nickel-plated, glass shade overlaid with opal |
exhibition | Hamburg, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf |
surface | Transparent |
style | Current design, design classics |
Degree of protection | IP 20 |
details | Cable length 2.5m |
Fittings / bulbs | Led lamp |
scope of delivery | exclusive lamps |
Dimensions | H: 36cm, (base) Ø: 16cm, (shade) Ø: 18cm |
regulation | pull switch |
dimmability | Not dimmable |
version | E27 |
tension | 230V |
Maximum assembly | 7 W LED standard lamp |
test mark | CE |
light distribution | Diffuse General, Direct |
The timeless original design, the Wagenfeld table lamp WG24 by Tecnolumen , received the federal prize for good form in 1982 . It has also been available in the MoMA shop in New York since 1986. Typical for the Wagenfeld WA 24 table lamp is the noble glass base, the glass lamp shaft and the white hemispherical glass shade. The lights of the only ones protected by copyright and by Professor Wagenfeld are numbered consecutively. The timeless Bauhaus lamp is ideal as an exclusive lamp in the living room or office and looks particularly good on chests of drawers, sideboards or desks. Note: The manufacturer does not recommend using bulbs with a clear glass bulb, as the "inside" of these bulbs projects a shadow onto the opal glass.
Details:
Material: nickel-plated metal, opal glass shade
Dimensions: 36 cm (height), 16 cm (Ø base), 18 cm (Ø head)
The only re-edition protected by copyright and authorized by Prof. Wilhelm Wagenfeld.
Each lamp is numbered consecutively and bears the signet TECNOLUMEN/BAUHAUS.
Recommended illuminant: LED lamp 7 W, matt
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UrhG §§ 2, 3, 8, 23, 24 - "Bauhaus glass lamp" originator of the "Bauhaus glass lamp", characterized above all by a round glass base plate, a glass shaft, inside which a metal tube hides the electric cord, and a white, almost hemispherical glass shade, which conceals the bulb as the light source, is Wilhelm Wagenfeld alone in the legal sense.
Hamburg Higher Regional Court, judgment of March 4, 1999 – 3 U169/98