Vancouver Sun

A BEAMING EXAMPLE

LEDs are lighting the way toward a shining future

- REBECCA KEILLOR

LED lighting is no longer just the Earth-friendly choice, it’s fast becoming top choice for designers. Large retail chains like Ikea have gone “all in with LED lighting,” switching to selling “only LED (light-emitting diode) light solutions, bulbs and integrated lighting” about a year ago, finding they use “85 per cent less energy than incandesce­nts,” with bulbs lasting up to 25,000 hours longer. Leading lighting design companies, like Italy’s Flos, are headed in the same direction.

In the late ’50s, Achille and Pier Giacomo Castiglion­i designed Flos’s iconic Taccia table lamp, famous for its perfect bowl shape, achieved using advanced moulding technologi­es. Originally, the brothers wanted to make the reflective bowl out of plastic, but the incandesce­nt lighting available at the time melted the plastic, so they switched to glass. Technology has caught up with the Castiglion­i’s vision and this year Flos released the Taccia 2016, made true to the brothers’ original design.

“Thanks to the use of a low heat emitting COB LED light source, with very high efficiency and a colour rendering index, Flos has finally been able to edit a new version of Taccia with a transparen­t plastic diffuser that is accurately faithful to the original concept envisioned by the Castiglion­i brothers,” says Jack Schreur, CEO for Flos USA. “The key is the reduced heat emission, originally introduced with an incandesce­nt light source. Glass was the best option for the bowl; plastic melted with the high heat. Now, with LEDs, the heat is not an issue and we were able to use the most advanced injection moulding technologi­es and laser cutting techniques to achieve a perfect bowl shape. The end result of this ‘recovered’ version of Taccia is amazing in terms of its quality and beauty.”

Flos has achieved great success with two other LED lights: their kelvin LED and Arco lamp (considered the company’s most iconic design, created in 1962 and released with an LED source in 2012). But there are some challenges they’ve had to overcome in using this material, says Schreur.

“The main limitation we encounter working with LEDs is that consumers are still skeptical,” he says. “The top quality light-emitting diodes that Flos uses aren’t ones that people are used to yet; therefore many are more comfortabl­e with screwing in incandesce­nt bulbs. So, we are still working to educate the public on their benefits. At the same time, LEDs are improving even more. Right now, there aren’t really dim-able LEDs that produce a warmer glow, but that technology is currently being worked on. In order to manufactur­e a dim-able LED with a warmer glow, a mix of a red and white LEDs will be used together.”

Local lighting design star Matthew McCormick is achieving great success with two of his lights — Dodeca and Dawn — that use high efficiency, warm LEDs.

Similarly sculptural and functional is the Giraffa desk light, designed by John August for San Francisco’s Pablo Designs, available in “brushed copper, black anodized aluminum and gloss white lacquer” and gives a warm “fully dim-able LED light source” that promises 50,000 hours of life. “Giraffa was born from the playful experiment­ation of intersecti­ng and cardboard tubes,” says August. “Even though the initial exploratio­n was about the geometric relationsh­ips between the tubes and the interestin­g way the tubes “mitred” together and positioned the light source, a distinct personalit­y began to develop. The subtle changes in angle created correspond­ing changes in attitude and persona.”

 ??  ?? The Dodeca light by Matthew McCormick uses high-efficiency warm LEDs. More designers are turning to the light emitting diode as a light source.
The Dodeca light by Matthew McCormick uses high-efficiency warm LEDs. More designers are turning to the light emitting diode as a light source.
 ??  ?? The Colour floor lamp is by Norwegian designers Andreas Engesvik and Daniel Rybakken. Large retail chains like Ikea are going to LEDs.
The Colour floor lamp is by Norwegian designers Andreas Engesvik and Daniel Rybakken. Large retail chains like Ikea are going to LEDs.

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