Santa & Cole – Antoni Arola – Shiro 17 interior
942,00 €
incl. VAT plus Shipping Costs
Shiro, which translates as “white” in Japanese, carries deep significance in the country’s philosophical tradition, evoking emptiness, honor, purity, and calm. Its rational, refined structure does not enclose but filters light through the slats arranged in a cubic form. Although originally conceived for outdoor use, its smaller indoor version becomes a discreet and versatile source of indirect light.
Shiro represents a void brimming with potential, an expression of energy contained. A spiritual openness that invites contemplation and discovery. The result is a soft, grazing light that creates an atmosphere of calm and balance in any setting.
Specifications:
– Metal structure in matte white grey finish.
– White translucent diffuser.
– Electric cable length 2,5 m / 98.4″
– Weight: 2,5 kg / 5.51 lb
– Light source included / Recommended light source LED bulb
– Rated input wattage 3.4 W
– approx. weight: 2,5 kg / 5.5 lb (unpacked)
– LED bulb: 3,4 W / 470 lm / 2700K
– E27 – E26 / Max. hgt. 80 mm / 3.1”
– Includes dimmer (dimmable light source required).
– Input voltage: 100, 120, 230 Vac., (50 Hz / 60 Hz). According to destination.
Suitable only for indoor use.
Always use the light source recommended or equivalent.
Regulations:
European version
UNE-EN 60598
UNE-EN 55015
UNE-EN 60529
Maintenance:
Clean with a smooth cloth. Do not use ammonia, solvents or abrasive cleaning products.
Others:
– The lamp is delivered in one package.
– The assembly instructions are delivered with the product.
EU shipping only!
Description
Santa & Cole – Antoni Arola – Shiro 17 interior
Santa & Cole is a small, independent and global editor of design products, with its roots in Belloch (Barcelona, Spain). We have been editing since 1985, when the company was first founded. By editing we mean preparing a work for the public domain, we mean adapting an item for everyone’s use. What a book editor does with stories, we do with objects.
More than eighty creators have contributed to a rich catalogue of furniture and lighting products originating in very different contexts, by renowned designers such as Antoni Arola, Miguel Milá, André Ricard and llmari Tapiovaara.
Acute and attentive to quality and detail, Santa & Cole outsources all of its industrial production to an extensive network of suppliers, mainly in Spain, but also in other countries such as Japan, where the washi paper for our Tekiò lamp is made.
Our mission is to build, safeguard and disseminate knowledge through design objects. Objects whose quality is recognisable at the touch of a hand, and that enrich people’s lives, whether at home or in shared environments. Our philosophy is more modern than futurist and we are more intrigued by silence than by stridency.
Our focus is not the present market, but the future one; not Barcelona, but the world; not fashion, but history.
Santa & Cole was founded by Nina Masó, Javier Nieto Santa and Gabriel Ordeig Cole in 1985, during a decade of upheaval in Spain when anything seemed possible in the wake of the dictatorship.
The early days, creating exceptional lamps for some of Barcelona’s most famous bars, soon led to commissions to light the homes of regular patrons of some of those venues. At a time when halogen lamps (cool to the touch, with a bluish light) were all the rage, Santa & Cole advocated the use of natural materials like wood, stitched cardboard or ribbons. In some cases, existing designs were revisited, and in others, new ones, such as the Básica lamp, were developed. We shifted the mood from technical and cold to human and warm.
In the 1990s, in the joyful aftermath of the Barcelona Olympics, some of the larger lamps, modular lamps, were born, such as the Estadio or the Moaré, responding to the need to illuminate public places.
Since LED lighting stormed onto the scene at the dawn of the 21st century, we have continued our quest for light that enhances the beauty of objects, shadows and people. Examples of this are the Cirio and Tekiò series. We remain committed to creating ambiences and moods, night and day, that serve to improve habitability at home or elsewhere.




































