Function, made deliberate. The Arden Axis is a reading light that has decided it is also something more, a composition of arm, dome, and sphere in matte charcoal that draws a quiet line across a wall and directs warmth exactly where it is needed.
The dome head is small and precise, it does not flood a room, it focuses it. A pool of warm light falls forward and downward, leaving the rest of the wall in a calm half-shadow that makes the space around it feel considered rather than incomplete. The arm curves with intention, the circular base grounds the composition, and the pull chain on the single version adds the same tactile quality that makes bedside lighting feel genuinely personal.
The Tall version takes this further. A vertical pin rises from the base to a decorative sphere at its crown, not a light source, but a counterpoint. Something to rest the eye on above the functional arm. The composition becomes architectural: base, arm, apex. Three elements that give a 70cm piece the presence of something that was always meant to be exactly where it is.
Both versions are finished in matte charcoal, a tone that recedes against pale walls and asserts itself against dark ones, adapting to the room rather than imposing on it.










