Lumino Stripe Candle Holder Steel Gray And Crystal By Federico Peri
NEED HELP? BOOK AN APPOINTMENT
REQUEST PRODUCT CUSTOMIZATION
REQUEST WHITE GLOVE DELIVERY PRICE
DESCRIPTION
The Lumino Stripe candle holder in Steel Gray and Crystal Murano glass pendant sits on a satin brass tray. Transparent beveled upper glass elements for the column reveal murrina glass rods, while the side is vertically decorated with stripes. The oval tray has a sloped one end designed to help keep the candle in place.
Customisable
Eco-friendly
Download Product Tear Sheet
- Scheduled delivery via trusted carriers to your immediate entryway. Item will be left in its packaging
- Shipping to United Kingdom : TBD
- Effortless delivery to the room of your choice with assembled and packaging removal.
- Request White Glove Delivery Price
- Read our return policy
- The Price-Match Guarantee applies to the same seller's advertised list price for the same item.
- To qualify for our Price-Match Guarantee, send us a copy of the lower advertised list price and we will match it.
- Masterful Artisans: Decofetch collaborates with artisans who passionately preserve and elevate time-honored crafts, ensuring that each piece is a masterpiece.
- Lasting Quality: Our creations, crafted with precision and care, are designed to be cherished for generations, all while adhering to sustainable, eco-friendly practices.
- Made-to-Order Excellence: We eschew mass production, opting for custom, made-to-order pieces that reduce waste and showcase meticulous attention to detail.
- Eco-Friendly Finesse: Decofetch prioritizes eco-friendly materials, such as certified woods and noble, recycled resources, while vehemently opposing the use of plastics.
Recommended items
Purho
Purho is a new protagonist of Italian design distilled into years of experimentation and research. Combining the Italian soul with an international character, it presents themed collections of Murano creations of the highest quality created by Italy's most celebrated designers and realized using ancient glassblowing techniques. This is pure design — what Purho always believed design was really meant for: the creation of "fairy-tale objects" like vases, lighting objects, glassware ...
...