Tornado lamp
Tornado lamp
Tornado lamp
Tornado lamp

Tornado lamp

245,00

This lamp is a unique piece. It was created from a Tornado heater from the 60s.

  • Coulor : Black
  • Materials : Bakélite, plastic
  • Dimensions : H.47 x L.28 x P.28 cm
  • Lighting : LED
  • Date of upcycled product : 70’s

Free delivery in metropolitan France.

Available: 1 in stock

Through this design and vintage object, the ArtJL brand offers you to opt for sustainable and responsible lighting.

To give a second life to this heater, to transform it into a lamp, it has been cleaned, sanded, painted and repainted.

A specific lighting system was installed depending on the desired ambiance.

Thanks to its amazing design, this lamp brings a particularly original touch to your interior. Its conical shape gives you a 360 ° light projection on the floor and on the walls. Lighting by a 9W LED bulb provided.

The matte black finish was chosen to enhance the contemporary appearance of this object.

Original creation by ArtJL. Unique model, signed and numbered ArtJL447.

Radiateur-tornado-avant-stickers

This model, manufactured in the 1960s in Germany for the French market under the brand Tornado, has a "Space age" design. It reminds us of the shape of a rocket. Its trade name at the time was "Pine cone". This model was much sought after by lovers of futuristic design. But it was, paradoxically, a rare model, because its shape was too avant-garde for interiors of the 60s.

By transforming it into a lamp, the ArtJL brand continues the history of this object.

BEFOREAFTER TRANSFORMATION
radiateur_tornado_avantLampe Tornado design vintage 8

 

« I discovered the ArtJL brand in a vintage living room. I really fell in love with the Thermor white lamp. I had to wait until my birthday to rediscover, on a shelf in my library, the harmonious curves of this lamp. I do not regret my choice. All my friends love it. Thanks to Jérôme Peyronnet for this fine work accomplished.» (Pascale P., Marseille)

« When Jérôme showed me his first upcyling of Thermor heaters from the 60s and 70s, memories of childhood immediately resurfaced. Because, it is indeed a Thermor radiator which warmed us the winter after the bath, in the bathroom of my grandmother where I lived for a time. Also, the idea of ​​reviving this object that would probably have ended up in the recycling center immediately appealed to me. I was able to find the heater that was sleeping in an attic and entrust it to Jérôme who transformed it into a superb ArtJL lamp. The latter now sits prominently in my living room.» (François-René A., Le Mans)