At the origin of Flos lies the concept of luminosity: the idea of creating objects from a light bulb that could change the way people live, not just Italians. Thus, in the early 1960s, a certain Mr. Gavina, from the small manufacturer Eisenkeil in Merano, after having created many new furniture pieces (with Achille and Pier Giacomo Castiglioni, Afra and Tobia Scarpa, and other design masters), got it into his head that it was also time to create new lamps. So, the Castiglioni brothers and the Scarpas, using the cocoon technique, invented in the United States and pioneered by Eisenkeil, began manufacturing lamps like the Taraxacum or the Fantasma. These early lamps were followed by many more, beautiful and surprising ones: thus, even in its prehistory, Flos (Latin for “flower,” the name given by Pier Giacomo Castiglioni) found itself reinventing the idea of artificial lighting.
IC T1 LOW
Michael AnastassiadesTable lamp with diffused light. Structure in brass, brushed and transparent lacquered or chromed steel. Opal blown glass diffuser. Light regulator present on the power cable.
The design takes the form of a perfectly balanced sphere on the edge of a bar and all the lamps in the IC collection arise from this idea. Anastassiades was inspired by an online video of a juggler doing a number with spheres, moving them over his arms and the edge of his fingers.