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Wolfsbane
Pendant
Lights

Pendant lights commissioned to light a high end restaurant, balancing material exploration, production constraints, and detail refinement.

Duration 3 months — 2025
Skills CMF · Small Scale Production · Sewing · Metal Work · 3D Modeling · Additive Manufacturing · Client Relations
Category Lighting · Professional Commission · Material Development
Bruno Munari Bali Light

The Brief

Client's Needs

  • 18 pendant lamps
  • Form inspired by Bruno Munari's Bali light
  • Emphasis on faceted edges
  • Clean, consistent production

Personal Challenge

  • Plastic minimization, material exploration + development
  • Standardized system for producing the lights as efficiently and consistently as possible

The Breakdown

This project ended up not being about designing a light, but rather designing a system of production. There were 3 phases to the system:

The Skeleton

The Skeleton

The Skins

The Skins

The Assembly

The Assembly

The Skeleton

Proportion
Bending
Integration

Rather than repeating a single cubic form, I proposed a range of proportions to introduce variation and rhythm across the space. The frame became the foundation for this flexibility.

Proportion Sketches

To achieve consistency across units, I developed a jig-based bending system for the round rod frames. Adjustable pegs defined the geometry, allowing the same setup to be reused across different proportions. A repeatable process — heat, bend, cool — ensured accuracy and reduced variation between parts. After iteration, the system produced near-identical frames at speed.

Frame Bending Jig
4 Bend Frames

Frames were welded into final assemblies, then paired with a custom 3D-printed mount to precisely locate the light socket and conceal hardware within the form. A black sprayed finish unified the structure and receded visually, allowing the illuminated skin to take focus.

Light Mount Sketches Complete Frames

Phase 02

The Skins

Click a swatch to explore
Material Studies
Material swatch Material Studies
SeaWool
01 — Material Development SeaWool
Color + Atmosphere
02 — Color Color + Atmosphere
Pivots
03 — Process Pivots
← Back to swatches

Phase 03

The Assembly

Assembly became an exercise in managing tolerance. Pattern shape, seam placement, coating, and tension all had to work together to preserve the light's sharp geometry. Through repeated adjustments to the stencil, coating process, and closing method, I developed a workflow that produced consistently tight, clean skins across all 18 units.

Assembly Stack
Wolfsbane Pendant Lights
Wolfsbane Pendant Lights

Learning
Takeaways

01

Producing one unit is easy — producing 18 that behave the same requires a system.

02

Plastic-free, flexible translucency is difficult to achieve; in real environments, durability ultimately takes precedence.

03

Biomaterials are highly sensitive to environmental conditions, making consistency and longevity a core challenge.

04

Designing for a client requires aligning vision with reliability through constant communication and informed compromise.

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Get in touch

Let's work together

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