A hundred centimetres of translucent stone, suspended above a dining table as individual discs, each one organic, each one irregularly edged, each one glowing from its own brass fixing. The Solthera is the pendant that makes a dining room into the room a house is remembered by.
Every disc is different. Cut from translucent stone and left with its natural edge, no regularising, no smoothing into uniformity, each one carries its own veining, its own opacity, its own private landscape of clouded white and amber that becomes visible only when the light within it comes on. Mounted across a 100cm brass bar at varying angles, each disc slightly overlapping the next, the composition reads as something found rather than arranged, a garland of stone flowers that arrived in exactly this configuration because no other would have been as right.
The brass bar above is flat and minimal, 51cm long at the canopy, suspended on two brass chains that allow the full 100cm pendant body to hang at the correct height for any dining table. The adjustable drop, three sections of 30, 30, and 20cm, gives specifiers genuine precision in placing the pendant exactly where the light and the composition are most effective.
Below the bar, the stone discs create a quality of light that is entirely their own. Each one glows individually, the brass boss at the centre of each disc the only point where the light is fully visible, the stone around it diffusing that warmth outward in a soft, non-directional pool. Together, the full row of discs creates a warm continuous wash above the table that has the quality of candlelight scaled to a room, intimate, flattering, and unlike any other pendant in the range.






