If you dont like the big light, you already understand the entire brand.
Go straight to the shop.
Go straight to the shop.
That is basically where this started.
The shapes underneath mushroom caps, called lamellae, look strangely engineered for something that grows out of wet moss in the forest.
Somewhere between alien structure and natural perfection, and it turns out they also make pretty good lamp inspiration.
Every lamp starts as a digital model and gets printed slowly over many hours.
Not because this is the fastest way to make lamps. It absolutely is not.
But 3D printing allows shapes that are difficult, expensive, or just annoying to produce any other way. So we kept doing it.
Most lamps are made after purchase. It keeps production smaller, slower, and honestly more fun.
Less storage. Less waste. A bit more waiting time.
We keep a few around, but generally we prefer not filling a warehouse with lamps nobody asked for yet.
Tiny variations happen naturally during printing.
That is part of the process, not a defect.
Strong, durable, slightly translucent, and very good at becoming a lamp.
We use PETG because it lasts a long time, and creates a soft diffused glow when light passes through it.
Also because it handles heat well and replacing melted lamps sounded like a bad business model.