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Design Week flicks on the switch with a show of lights

Design Week flicks on the switch with a show of lights

The Advertiser14-05-2025

Of more than 350 events and exhibitions for Melbourne Design Week, it's easy to pick which one shines brightest.
At North Melbourne's Meat Market Stables, the free exhibition 100 LIGHTS illuminates the work of more than 100 Australian designers, from moody bar lighting, to chandeliers worthy of a concert hall.
One standout is Seven Flowers and a Tall Vase, by Moroccan-born and Melbourne-based designer Abdé Nouamani.
On top of a walnut plinth in a polished cast aluminium vase sits a bunch of lights on stems.
Just like the blooms in a real bunch of flowers, they can be rearranged, because each light has been designed to be moveable.
The lights are housed in aluminium cups that were cut out from a Dutch pancake pan, explained Nouamani.
"I chopped them up and polished them to bring them that shine... they were the perfect lamp holder for the lamps that I was using," he said.
Sundown Lighting's Ripple Chandelier is made from timber shaped into waves, while Ross Gardam's Aeris light is constructed from mouth-blown glass "clouds" fixed to brass bars.
It all shines a light on the inventiveness of local designers, and the variety of materials in play.
There are attractions on a smaller scale too, such as an Igloo sconce from Giffin Design, which shines through a solid block of clear glass, highlighting tiny bubbles of air trapped inside.
And there are quirky pieces on show, like the Wavy Lamp from Luke James, made using vintage Levi's denim for a vintage clothing store.
Issues around lighting - or the lack of it - are a feature of the Design Week program in other ways also.
Illuminating Darkness: Shining a Light on Women's Safety in Running looks at how urban design impacts on safety for female runners.
A discussion session at Collingwood Yards with Katherine Newton and Tom Robertson of V1 Studios will be followed by a 5km run, with participants wearing headlamps to light the way.Melbourne Design Week runs from Thursday until May 25, while 100 LIGHTS runs until Sunday.
Of more than 350 events and exhibitions for Melbourne Design Week, it's easy to pick which one shines brightest.
At North Melbourne's Meat Market Stables, the free exhibition 100 LIGHTS illuminates the work of more than 100 Australian designers, from moody bar lighting, to chandeliers worthy of a concert hall.
One standout is Seven Flowers and a Tall Vase, by Moroccan-born and Melbourne-based designer Abdé Nouamani.
On top of a walnut plinth in a polished cast aluminium vase sits a bunch of lights on stems.
Just like the blooms in a real bunch of flowers, they can be rearranged, because each light has been designed to be moveable.
The lights are housed in aluminium cups that were cut out from a Dutch pancake pan, explained Nouamani.
"I chopped them up and polished them to bring them that shine... they were the perfect lamp holder for the lamps that I was using," he said.
Sundown Lighting's Ripple Chandelier is made from timber shaped into waves, while Ross Gardam's Aeris light is constructed from mouth-blown glass "clouds" fixed to brass bars.
It all shines a light on the inventiveness of local designers, and the variety of materials in play.
There are attractions on a smaller scale too, such as an Igloo sconce from Giffin Design, which shines through a solid block of clear glass, highlighting tiny bubbles of air trapped inside.
And there are quirky pieces on show, like the Wavy Lamp from Luke James, made using vintage Levi's denim for a vintage clothing store.
Issues around lighting - or the lack of it - are a feature of the Design Week program in other ways also.
Illuminating Darkness: Shining a Light on Women's Safety in Running looks at how urban design impacts on safety for female runners.
A discussion session at Collingwood Yards with Katherine Newton and Tom Robertson of V1 Studios will be followed by a 5km run, with participants wearing headlamps to light the way.Melbourne Design Week runs from Thursday until May 25, while 100 LIGHTS runs until Sunday.
Of more than 350 events and exhibitions for Melbourne Design Week, it's easy to pick which one shines brightest.
At North Melbourne's Meat Market Stables, the free exhibition 100 LIGHTS illuminates the work of more than 100 Australian designers, from moody bar lighting, to chandeliers worthy of a concert hall.
One standout is Seven Flowers and a Tall Vase, by Moroccan-born and Melbourne-based designer Abdé Nouamani.
On top of a walnut plinth in a polished cast aluminium vase sits a bunch of lights on stems.
Just like the blooms in a real bunch of flowers, they can be rearranged, because each light has been designed to be moveable.
The lights are housed in aluminium cups that were cut out from a Dutch pancake pan, explained Nouamani.
"I chopped them up and polished them to bring them that shine... they were the perfect lamp holder for the lamps that I was using," he said.
Sundown Lighting's Ripple Chandelier is made from timber shaped into waves, while Ross Gardam's Aeris light is constructed from mouth-blown glass "clouds" fixed to brass bars.
It all shines a light on the inventiveness of local designers, and the variety of materials in play.
There are attractions on a smaller scale too, such as an Igloo sconce from Giffin Design, which shines through a solid block of clear glass, highlighting tiny bubbles of air trapped inside.
And there are quirky pieces on show, like the Wavy Lamp from Luke James, made using vintage Levi's denim for a vintage clothing store.
Issues around lighting - or the lack of it - are a feature of the Design Week program in other ways also.
Illuminating Darkness: Shining a Light on Women's Safety in Running looks at how urban design impacts on safety for female runners.
A discussion session at Collingwood Yards with Katherine Newton and Tom Robertson of V1 Studios will be followed by a 5km run, with participants wearing headlamps to light the way.Melbourne Design Week runs from Thursday until May 25, while 100 LIGHTS runs until Sunday.
Of more than 350 events and exhibitions for Melbourne Design Week, it's easy to pick which one shines brightest.
At North Melbourne's Meat Market Stables, the free exhibition 100 LIGHTS illuminates the work of more than 100 Australian designers, from moody bar lighting, to chandeliers worthy of a concert hall.
One standout is Seven Flowers and a Tall Vase, by Moroccan-born and Melbourne-based designer Abdé Nouamani.
On top of a walnut plinth in a polished cast aluminium vase sits a bunch of lights on stems.
Just like the blooms in a real bunch of flowers, they can be rearranged, because each light has been designed to be moveable.
The lights are housed in aluminium cups that were cut out from a Dutch pancake pan, explained Nouamani.
"I chopped them up and polished them to bring them that shine... they were the perfect lamp holder for the lamps that I was using," he said.
Sundown Lighting's Ripple Chandelier is made from timber shaped into waves, while Ross Gardam's Aeris light is constructed from mouth-blown glass "clouds" fixed to brass bars.
It all shines a light on the inventiveness of local designers, and the variety of materials in play.
There are attractions on a smaller scale too, such as an Igloo sconce from Giffin Design, which shines through a solid block of clear glass, highlighting tiny bubbles of air trapped inside.
And there are quirky pieces on show, like the Wavy Lamp from Luke James, made using vintage Levi's denim for a vintage clothing store.
Issues around lighting - or the lack of it - are a feature of the Design Week program in other ways also.
Illuminating Darkness: Shining a Light on Women's Safety in Running looks at how urban design impacts on safety for female runners.
A discussion session at Collingwood Yards with Katherine Newton and Tom Robertson of V1 Studios will be followed by a 5km run, with participants wearing headlamps to light the way.Melbourne Design Week runs from Thursday until May 25, while 100 LIGHTS runs until Sunday.

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