April 23, 2012

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We love making models and lamps

Making a mess

Everyone in our industry seems to be doing computer graphics these days but we still love the hands-on  messiness of model making. Our origins are in Stage Design and we've modeled anything & everything for theatre, TV and pop videos; from life-size models of Ian Paisley & Madness through to alien intestines & robotic dancing legs.

Being Different

Our love for lamps came when we were asked to make a model of a bull terrier called Onion that could be turned into a plastic lamp. Making models was natural to us but we weren’t so sure about the lamp part until we met Heico, a small family run firm in Northern Bavaria. They have a wonderful process, part hi-tech, part old-fashioned that makes seamless lamps (so you don’t see any joins when they’re lit up). They know how to make them cheaply but still in small numbers which really suits us as we much prefer to make unusual lamps than mass produce them.

Lamps we’ve already made...

Onion the Bull Terrier

It all began with Onion. She's a celebrity dog & a much loved pet that belongs to friends of Myra's nephew Dom. Her owners had seen some lamps in a Soho shop window and wanted someone to make one of Onion. We modelled her one lazy Sunday afternoon, packed the model off to Heico for processing and a few weeks later (and a little to our surprise) she was a hit selling in Liberty and other, equally trendy, stores across London.

Diego the Schnauzer

Diego is a schnauzer that we regularly see walking in East London's Victoria Park. Unfortunately we couldn't get him I'm the studio so he was made from memory plus the odd google for schnauzer pics. To be honest, Diego isn't really his name as we haven't been able to contact his owner so if you do know who Diego's really is then please get in touch.

Lamps we’re designing...

Archie the Whippet

Archie is a whippet that belongs to friends of friends. Like Onion he’s also a bit celeb because he's  been filmed by the Beeb at a gay pride march wearing a pink tutu. Like most whippets, once he's had his 10 minutes of madness each day, he's happy to settle down making him an ideal subject for a sitting in our studio.

Blake the Tiger Cub

Blake was an idea that started in a school playground in Dalston. Myra, our artist, was chatting with Sophie Darlington a photographer for 21st Century Tiger, a charity based at London Zoo. The charity works hard to protect the few remaining tigers in the wild. Sophie asked if we could make a tiger cub model that could raise funds and so Blake was born.

Radish the French Bulldog

The original Radish was a French Bulldog owned, again, by friends of ours. We’d always planned on getting Radish into the studio for a sitting but somehow it never seemed to happen. So we Googled and our Radish is a bit of a mongrel made from some great images we found there. 

How we do it...

Clay, wax, silicon

We use either clay or modelling wax to make the initial model. This first model is too soft for Heico’s copper mould making process so when we’re happy with it we make a much harder one by covering our soft model in silicon rubber, peeling it off and filling the resulting rubber mould with dense pouring wax.

Each lamp is made by hand

The pouring wax model is sent to Bavaria where it’s immersed in a nickel then copper electrolytic bath. The wax is melted out of the copper mould and work begins. Each lamp is made by hand, spinning hot polypropylene inside the mould then removing it before it hardens & pumping it back into shape before it cools. 

Our new Animal Lamps for Kids collection

The supplier of our Onion Lamp design has recently changed the 10w halogen bulb and transformer to a 110/240v mains bulb with no transformer. 


The benefit of this is cost & simplicity. There's no expensive transformer to go wrong. The downsides are:

1. The lamp is less energy efficient.

2. Most importantly for us this mean it's not suitable as a children's night light. Though perfectly legal, in our opinion nothing in this day and age that's attractive to children should be powered by mains electricity.

We realise that many people looking for animal lamps will be searching for gifts for a child so we've created a new collection animal lamps for kids. Nothing in this collection carries more electrical current than a typical child's toy. View our animal lamps for kids.


stephen creedon
stephen creedon

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