The Hamilton Spectator

TASTY TROUT

- KIM COOK

Designer Lee Broom was vacationin­g at a friend’s house in the Cotswolds, an idyllic bit of rural England.

“I’m a city boy, brought up in the Midlands and living in London for the past 25 years, so had never really experience­d that intense blanket of stars that you find on a beautiful, clear night in the countrysid­e, with the constellat­ions so clearly marked,” he says.

Broom was so captivated that when he got home, he began designing a lighting collection named Observator­y. Since its debut at Salone di Mobile in Milan in the spring, Broom has brought the collection to NYCx-Design 2018. It goes on to London’s Design Festival in September.

The designs interpret the characteri­stics of sun and star reflection and light refraction in sculptural, spherical forms. Mirror-polished stainless steel and gold spheres are incorporat­ed with concealed LEDs and acrylic discs and tubes, creating light sculptures in the form of pendants, table lamps and wall sconces. The names pay homage to the heavens: Eclipse, Orion, Tidal, Aurora.

The firmament has often been a source of inspiratio­n for decor and furniture designers, and we’re seeing lots of examples right now. Part of the appeal lies in a moody, dramatic palette of blues, blacks and spectral hues, as well as silhouette­s that evoke a modernist élan. A plate from West Elm’s constellat­ion ceramic plate collection which features a scattering of sparkles on midnight blue background­s.

London-based designer Katja Behre presented a new wallpaper at the Internatio­nal Contempora­ry Furniture Fair this spring in New York for her Elli Popp line. A matte black background is dotted with vertical, metallic threads, like a meteor shower, or falling rain against a night sky.

New Yorker Sarah Merenda has done a clean, crisp, eightpoint-star-patterned wallpaper that’s offered in several colourways on a white or black background.

Brooklyn, New York-based Calico Wallpaper offers several celestial-themed designs. Lunaris has fog-, smoke- and midnight-hued background­s with silver overlay that evoke the moon’s surface as seen through a telescope. Aurora, with a soothing palette in an ombre pattern, depicts the sky’s constant transforma­tion from dawn to dusk. And Inverted Spaces, a collaborat­ion with Amsterdam’s BCXSY studio, transforms telescopic imagery of constellat­ions into abstracted, matte-painted images. Even this collection’s colour names take us on a journey into the universe: Corona, Andromeda, Ursa, Cassiopeia.

Health Ceramics, a studio in Sausalito, California, has a new glaze — Cosmos — that evokes

deep space and star-filled galaxies for a vase collection. The swirling mixture of dark and light blues and glossy black create the effect.

There are more starry ceramics at West Elm: a collection of inky blue salad plates is scattered with pinpoints of gold constellat­ions.

Avant-garde Italian design house Seletti collaborat­ed with Diesel Living on a porcelain plate collection, Cosmic, with patterns evoking Jupiter, Venus, the sun and the moon. Also from Seletti: the whimsical Lunar brass tabletop storage containers shaped like retro spaceships.

Luceplan took home an NYCx-Design award in May for Norwegian designer Daniel Rybakken’s Amisol, an oversize pendant fixture composed of translucen­t white film or metallized mirror stretched inside an aluminum circle. The large, almost weightless disk resembles a solar sail, either reflecting or diffusing the light.

Antiqued brass turns an eightpoint­ed star pendant fixture at Arteriors into a warm yet dramatic fixture; its shallow profile is a great option for low ceilings.

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 ??  ?? Cosmos glazed vases evoke midnight skies and star-filled galaxies.
Cosmos glazed vases evoke midnight skies and star-filled galaxies.
 ??  ?? The Orion Tube and Orion Globe lights hung horizontal­ly and are part of Lee Broom’s new Observator­y collection.
The Orion Tube and Orion Globe lights hung horizontal­ly and are part of Lee Broom’s new Observator­y collection.
 ??  ?? The Eclipse three-piece chandelier in Lee Broom’s new Observator­y collection.
The Eclipse three-piece chandelier in Lee Broom’s new Observator­y collection.

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