Introducing: The Echoes of Time Wall Lamp
Mar 17,2026 | elegaLight

There is a certain kind of person who still buys vinyl.
Not for convenience, but for the ritual. The act of choosing, placing, lowering the tonearm — a slower, more intentional way of engaging with sound.
The Echoes of Time Wall Lamp draws from this mindset.
It doesn’t replicate a record player. It captures the feeling of one.
Form, Referenced, Not Repeated


A circular glass disc sits at the center, etched with subtle concentric rings that recall the grooves of a record. When illuminated, light spreads outward in soft layers, not sharp, not uniform, but gently diffused.
The body is constructed from stainless steel and aluminum, giving the piece a precise, architectural presence. Clean edges, controlled proportions, and a quiet sense of weight balance the warmth of the light.
Two Sources of Light, Two Ways of Living
At its core, the lamp is designed as a dual-light system.

The main disc emits a soft ambient glow, adjustable from 3000K to 6000K. It shifts easily from warm evening light to a brighter, more functional tone, adapting to different moments of the day.
Alongside it, a smaller spotlight extends from a slender arm. Fully adjustable with 360° rotation, it allows for precise, directional lighting, for reading, highlighting, or simply adding contrast.


Each light is controlled independently through two rotary knobs.
A small detail, but an intentional one, tactile, mechanical, and quietly satisfying.
A Familiar Gesture, Reinterpreted
The spotlight arm is more than functional.
It echoes the motion of a tonearm, a gesture that many recognize instinctively, even if they’ve never owned a record player.
This subtle reference transforms interaction into experience.
Adjusting the light feels less like operating a fixture, and more like engaging with an object.
Designed for Slower Interiors

With a compact proportion of 30 × 3 × 24 cm, the lamp sits close to the wall, making it suitable for spaces where clarity and restraint matter.
It works naturally beside a bed, replacing both ambient and reading light.
In a hallway, it creates a quiet rhythm.
In a living space, it becomes a subtle focal point, not loud, but deliberate.
Not Just Nostalgia
The appeal of vinyl has never been about the past alone.
It’s about choosing a different pace.
The Echoes of Time Wall Lamp follows the same idea.
It brings together precision materials, adjustable lighting, and a familiar form, not to replicate, but to reinterpret.
A piece for those who prefer objects with intention.
And light that lingers a little longer.

