The Lighting Fixtures Collection.
The studio’s collection of brass and ceramic fixtures, sold as a coordinated catalog. The argument that a lamp belongs to a room, not to itself. Featured in House Beautiful, Domino, Apartment Therapy, Country Living.
A collection that knew the room.
The Lighting Fixtures collection was the studio’s catalog spine. Forty-plus fixtures across brass, ceramic, glass, and wood, designed to coordinate across a single room. Table lamps to floor lamps to wall sconces, all sharing finish vocabularies and proportional rules.
The argument the collection made was that a lamp belongs to a room, not to itself. Designers were sold individual fixtures everywhere. The studio’s contribution was to design forty fixtures together, so that specifying a brass-and-ceramic combination across a whole interior was a single design decision, not forty.
The collection closed in 2019 when the studio retired fixture production. The pieces that remained in inventory sold through over the following year.
Coordinate. Repeat. Hold the line.
Three rules that made the collection a catalog rather than a list, and still inform how the network’s designers approach whole-room fixture coordination.
01
Coordinated, not assembled
Every fixture in the collection was designed in relation to the others. Finish vocabularies repeated. Proportional rules held. Designers could spec brass-and-ceramic across a whole room knowing it would coordinate visually.
02
Repeat materials across scale
The brass on the table lamp was the same brass on the wall sconce was the same brass on the floor lamp. No ‘antique brass on the sconces, polished brass on the table lamp’ compromise. One brass, one ceramic palette, one wood.
03
Hold the line on hardware
Visible hardware (sockets, harps, finials, switches) used the same vocabulary across the entire collection. The argument was that hardware variety reads as visual clutter even when individual pieces are well-finished.
Whole-room coordination didn’t go away.
The collection is closed. The principle (specify across a room, not one fixture at a time) is the same principle the network’s designers apply on every whole-house interior plan.









