A working record of where our fixtures ended up — homes, cafes, a ferry terminal, the odd boardroom. Some are stock pieces hung well, some were drawn from nothing.
We've stayed deliberately small and local. It means we can hang and aim nearly everything ourselves, which is why these rooms look the way they do rather than the way a courier left them.

A six-metre ceiling and a long shared table with nothing to anchor it. We hung three Aion Halos at staggered heights so they read as one piece from the door and a row of three from the table.
The fiddly part was the evening. We spent a full day on the dimmer scenes so the room could go from a bright workshop-class for tea ceremonies down to a low amber glow for the last guests.

Eleven glass orbs dropping through the void beside the stairs. The owner wanted it dim enough to leave on all night, so we wired it on its own low circuit.

Four linear pendants on one circuit, warm enough that the baristas stopped squinting at the till.

A matched bronze pair at the entrance, 2200K, so the first thing you meet at night is a soft glow rather than a glare.
A fixture fights or flatters the sun depending on where it sits. We track the window before we pick a spot.
Drop length changes everything — too low and it's in your eyeline, too high and the table goes dark. This is the first measurement we take.
A dining table, an island, a stairwell void. The surface decides the spread, the lumens and the shape.
Rooms get used after dark. We light for 9pm first and let daytime look after itself.
The requests cluster, oddly. Most start as one of these and drift somewhere personal by the end.
Bring a photo and a rough height and we'll tell you which way it tends to go.
High ceilings and big tables that swallow normal fittings. Usually ends up as a halo or a custom ring drawn to the span.
Several linear pendants wired as one line, matched in tone, dimmable so the space can shift through the day.
Sconces and a floor lamp at 2200K, the kind of glow that makes a living room feel like the end of the day rather than the middle of it.
Runs the shopping tray, the order form and basic security. These are set whatever you choose, and the site won't work without them. No tracking, gone when the session ends.
Remembers small things between visits — that you've already seen this banner, which currency view you picked, whether you collapsed the FAQ. Makes the site feel less forgetful.
Anonymous numbers on which pieces get opened and where people drop off, through a privacy-friendly counter. It tells us what to build more of. Your IP is truncated and nothing's sold on.
Lets us show our work to people who've visited, on a couple of other sites. Off unless you switch it on, and it never touches what's in your basket.