santa-cole-tatu-table-lamp-white-grey-santa-cole image

Holloways of Ludlow

Santa & Cole Tatu Table Lamp - White Grey Santa & Cole

£444

Colour: White, Grey

The Tatu Table Lamp is a versatile pop-art icon with a unique design inspired by the armadillo. Its mechanical body features three independently rotating sections, allowing placement on a shelf, desk, bedside table, or as a wall fixture. The lamp includes advanced LED technology for customizable brightness, enhanced by a moveable converging lens for adjustable light focus. Its sleek finish complements contemporary spaces, making it a stylish addition to any room.

For the most recent delivery information, please visit the retailer website here.

For more product details, including dimensions, please visit the retailer website here.

Original Product Description:

The Tatu Table Lamp, or armadillo, is a friendly mammal with a shell on its back that protects it when it rolls up into a ball. On a transoceanic flight, while reading about Argentinean wildlife and contemplating how the light above his seat did not disturb his sleeping wife next to him, Andra© Ricard came up with this lamp that became a pop-art icon in Europe. Like a compact flexo, Tatu''s mechanical body was conceived in three sections that can rotate independently to adapt its use for a shelf, on a desk, on a bedside table and even as a wall lamp (fittings included). The Santa & Cole edition enhances its initial performance by including LED technology, which makes the light intensity easy to adapt (from 0 to 100% in linear progression) and the source far less hot and longer lasting, but it also includes a moveable converging lens that extends or reduces the focal length between the light column (30° opening) and the general diffuser (50° opening). This means that the intensity and focal length are now adjustable. With the incorporation of Andra© Ricard, Santa & Cole is reinforcing its Design Classic Collection, which already includes such masters as Arne Jacobsen, Miguel Mila¡, Antoni de Moragas and Ilmari Tapiovaara.