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Hammerborgs on film

Since becoming addicted to The Killing and Borgen we've tried out a mixed bag of other Danish TV series, and most recently have been watching [more]

Why Jo Hammerborg's Orient is incomplete without its louvre

So the first Jo Hammerborg light reproduction has finally appeared, and the wisdom of the crowd has made itself apparent in our poll by correctly [more]

Changes ahead in the market for Jo Hammerborg lights

One of the features that has driven the increasing popularity of 60s and 70s Fog & Mørup lighting as a target for collectors – along [more]

Fog & Morup did not produce Carl Thore lights

In recent months we have noticed an apparent increase in the number of eBay sellers repeating the incorrect claim that the multilayered pendant lamps usually [more]

Jo Hammerborg and the Formland lamp series

The information that emerged from our correspondence with the Hammerborg family over the past 18 months (which has informed our new biography of Jo Hammerborg) [more]

Our new website dedicated to Jo Hammerborg

In May 2011 we wrote a post laying out the few facts we had been able to gather together during ten years of trawling through [more]

Solved! the Danish star light designer mystery

A couple of years ago we wrote a post (which you can read here) about the fact that we had been unable to find reliable [more]

Another twist in the Jørn Utzon Søvaernspendel debate

The identity of the designer of the Søvaernspendel, the light produced first by Nordisk Solar Compagni and later by Louis Poulsen, has been the subject [more]

The lights of Louis Weisdorf: Multi-Lite (1974)

The economic downturn of the 1970s brought new challenges for the designers of high-end lamps and other luxury goods, as producers' support for the experiments [more]

Verner Panton’s Panthella/3-light

When people come across a vintage Panthella for the first time they often think there’s something wrong with the on/off switch. “It’s not working properly”, they say. “I have to step on it twice to bring the light on, and twice again to turn it off.”

In fact, the four-step Panthella switch is a feature and not a bug! While later productions of this classic Verner Panton lamp have a standard two-step on/off switch housed a little way along the electric cable, the switch in the original design was a small button elegantly incorporated directly into the curve of the base, and its complex functioning was a key feature of the lamp.

Indeed, the lamp was introduced by its producer Louis Poulsen in 1971 as the Panthella/3-lys (Panthella/3-light). It required the use of a specially-designed bulb – hence its apparently strange behaviour when a standard bulb is used. A Poulsen advertisement, which we have translated from the original Danish, described the lamp as follows:

Verner Panton has created a new lamp. We’ve called it Panthella/3-light. It is no ordinary lamp, because with only one filament it has three levels of intensity: 60, 100, 160 watts. You press the button – with the hand or a foot – one, two or three times. Fourth time off. It’s quite simple. Panthella 3-light is not only new technology, it is functional design, and is simple and beautiful in form. Panthella is made of white plastic, so is easy to move around. The low Panthella is 68cm high, and many will use it as a table lamp. The high Panthella is 120cm tall, and designed to stand on the floor.

Verner Panton Louis Poulsen Panthella

Verner Panton Louis Poulsen Panthella

Verner Panton Louis Poulsen Panthella

Verner Panton Louis Poulsen Panthella

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2 Responses to “Verner Panton’s Panthella/3-light”

  • Rune Ottesen:

    Hi there,
    Do you know where to buy a replacement 3-way (60/100160 Watt) light bulb for this beautiful lamp ??

    Best Regards
    Rune O

    • Vintage Danish Lights:

      Hi Rune
      We bought a 3-lys bulb for our Panthella from Allerød Lamper, but can’t find them on their website now. May be worth asking them though.
      If anyone else knows anywhere that still has these bulbs, please let us know.

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