The ethos of lighting design has changed tremendously over the past decades with designers drawing inspiration from the unlikeliest of places and things for their inventive creations. Take the Vector pendant lamp for instance. Inspired by Brutalist architecture, Canadian designer Lukas Peet designed the Vector pendant lamp series that flaunts minimalist form with exposed raw material and structural elements.
Using precise paths to create the Brutalist lighting collection for contemporary lighting company A-N-D, Peet designed the series of Vector pendant lamps with three or six rectilinear pieces in a vertical orientation. The pendant lamps are hoisted by aircraft cables that connect to a hub in the center of the lighting fixture. When suspended, the light illuminated the hollow middle, and the inner and outer surfaces bidirectionally.
The use of precise paths is similar to “vectors” used by graphic designers referring to something fitted together to make a slim rectilinear piece. Peet’s Vector, on the other hand, is defined as a section that directs light down via its inner side to create a gradient effect.
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The light fixtures unveil small openings in the lamp’s architectural form, all the while intermingling with vacuums and volumes of its plain structure. Highlighting each fixture’s crisp lines and strong material in corten steel, black steel, or polished stainless steel, the Vector lamps seamlessly blend into any interior thanks to their raw finish.
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