
This is a 'Pakhus' pendant, designed in the 1970s by Erik Møllers Tegnestue for Danish lighting manufacturer Louis Poulsen. Each light hangs from a long white cord and holds a single, standard base bulb inside a white metal fixture with a textured socket collar and a small metal drum-shaped shade that leaves a glimpse of the neck of the bulb visible. The fixture exudes quality with a porcelain, lightly textured socket, sturdy connectors, and an enameled metal frame. These pendants were likely made in the last 10 years.
We have several pendants available. Sold individually.
Community Forklift always recommends LED bulbs which use less energy and produce less heat which helps to preserve vintage and antique fixtures.
Dimensions:
Fixture itself is small: 4.25" Diameter x 6.75" High
Hangs 53"
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The photos included in this listing show the item you will receive. Community Forklift merchandise is all previously owned; please review the photos carefully to assess condition. This listing includes only what is described and no additional items are included. Please raise any questions before purchasing at marketplace@communityforklift.org. Be advised that we do not place holds on any items listed online and they may sell at any time.
- Pick-up will be available during open warehouse hours: Monday – Sunday 12-5 pm.
- We offer 5 days of storage. You must pick up your item within 5 days of purchase. After 5 days, the item may be resold. If it is resold you will be refunded 75% of the purchase amount.
- We have staff available to load items. We strongly encourage you to bring help to load large purchases. Our staff will help as much as they can but will not load large, bulky, and heavy items into inappropriate vehicles.
- Shipping is not available. In-store pickup only.
Every time you donate or shop at Community Forklift, you’re helping us lift up local communities through reuse. We turn the construction waste stream into a resource stream for communities in the DC region – by keeping perfectly good items out of the landfill, preserving historical materials, providing low-cost building supplies, and creating local green jobs.