Some lamps illuminate space; others reinvent it. The
Seletti Window LED wall lamp, designed by
Marcantonio Raimondi Malerba for Seletti, belongs to the latter category, offering the illusion of a window where architecture provides none. Made of
wood and acrylic and available in three variations,
Loft,
Grenier and
Suite, this LED lamp from the
Seletti's Lighting colection projects a soft glow that feels like daylight captured within a frame. Its warm luminosity expands small rooms and transforms corridors, bedrooms and reading corners into atmospheric scenes. The lamp’s ability to mimic the emotional comfort of natural light makes it ideal for urban interiors with limited windows or spaces in need of depth and serenity.
Light, illusion and the poetry of everyday life
Marcantonio Raimondi Malerba’s work often reflects on the boundary between imagination and function, and the
Window Lamp is a perfect example of this balance. The combination of wood’s tactile warmth with the precision of acrylic generates a harmonious interplay that diffuses LED brightness evenly. The result is an evocative object capable of creating mood lighting without overwhelming the room. Whether hung alone or grouped into a composition of multiple “windows,” it becomes a decorative portal that influences perception. This
designer LED wall lamp invites the viewer to pause, reflect, and enjoy the gentle suggestion of an exterior landscape that exists only through light.
A wall lamp that becomes an emotional architectural gesture
To
buy Seletti Window LED wall lamp is to invest in a piece that enriches interiors at both emotional and aesthetic levels. Its indoor practicality makes it suitable for hallways, bedrooms, living rooms and hospitality settings, where lighting should invite comfort rather than impose it. The lamp’s
LED bulb ensures energy efficiency and long-lasting performance, while its construction reflects
Seletti’s ongoing commitment to expressive, imaginative design. With the
Window Lamp, walls stop being mere surfaces, they become stages for depth, atmosphere, and a sense of possibility. This object proves that design can open new horizons even where architecture cannot.