Velora Sphere 13-Globe Glass Chandelier
The Velora Sphere 13-Globe Glass Chandelier takes the multi-globe vocabulary into monumental cathedral-scale proportion — thirteen opal glass globes scattered across a bronze framework descending fourteen vertical feet from the ceiling. Where most chandeliers occupy a horizontal footprint near the ceiling plane, the Velora Sphere treats the full vertical volume between ceiling and floor as the design medium.
The fourteen-foot vertical drop does work no horizontal arrangement can. Thirteen opal globes descending across the substantial vertical span produce diffused warm light at multiple architectural levels simultaneously — upper globes scatter onto the ceiling and upper landings, mid-level globes project onto the architecture between floors, lower globes illuminate the ground floor below. The bronze framework holds the cascading geometry disciplined through the entire fourteen-foot span; the opal glass keeps each globe glowing softly rather than emitting directional point-source light.
A piece for the most monumental architecture — grand stairwells descending through multiple floors, cathedral-ceiling foyers with substantial vertical clearance, three-story atriums in homes built around vertical ceremony. The fourteen-foot drop demands the ceiling height most architecture cannot provide.