
TR Bulb Suspension Frame - Polished Steel
Product information for TR Bulb Suspension Frame - Polished Steel
The Audo Copenhagen TR Bulb, Suspension Frame is basically what happens when you take Tim Rundle's genius "portable lighting" concept and scale it up into a proper statement piece for dining tables and kitchen islands. Four of those perfect opal glass spheres hang from a sleek linear frame that stretches nearly four feet across, creating this graphic installation that somehow feels both substantial and weightless at the same time. You can get it in black powder-coated steel for a more industrial vibe or brushed brass if you want something warmer, and the bulbs come in either matte or shiny finishes - subtle differences that completely change the character of the whole fixture. What's brilliant is how the frame disappears visually, leaving you with what looks like four glowing orbs floating in perfect formation above your table. Each of the four TR Bulbs puts out 6.5W of dimmable LED light, giving you serious illumination for cooking or dining while maintaining that soft, even glow that makes everything look better rather than just brighter. The bulbs screw into standard E27 sockets, so if one burns out or you want to change the style, you just twist them out like regular light bulbs - no electrician required. The 10-foot textile cord gives you flexibility in positioning, and since the whole thing is designed around Tim Rundle's nomadic living philosophy, you could theoretically take this with you when you move. The dimensions work perfectly over standard dining tables or kitchen islands without overwhelming smaller spaces. Audo Copenhagen continues proving they understand how people actually want to live instead of just making lighting that photographs well. Tim Rundle's background with major design studios like Tom Dixon shows in how sophisticated this apparently simple concept really is - the proportions, spacing, and engineering all feel exactly right rather than just functional. The brand emerged from merging Menu and by Lassen, but they've kept that Danish desi



















