Scandinavia Design

PH Snowball

Louis Poulsen – Poul Henningsen

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Louis Poulsen, Danish Design Lighting
PH Snowball Louis Poulsen – Poul Henningsen
PH Snowball Louis Poulsen – Poul Henningsen

The PH Snowball suspension is considered to be a smaller version of the PH Louvre. It was made for the Adventist church in Skodsborg, Denmark. Unlike the PH Louvre, the number of shades is reduced to eight, mounted on three rods. The diameter of the luminaire is also reduced.

PH Snowball Louis Poulsen – Poul Henningsen

The PH Snowball was first presented with the PH5 and PH Pinecone. Its reintroduction in 1983 revived this luminaire, which is now made with white shades with a glossy upper section and a matt lower section.Β 

PH Snowball Louis Poulsen – Poul Henningsen
PH Snowball Louis Poulsen – Poul Henningsen
PH Snowball Louis Poulsen – Poul Henningsen
PH Snowball Louis Poulsen – Poul Henningsen

PH Snowball

Dimensions Ø40 x H39 cm

Materials spun aluminium. High lustre chrome plated, die cast aluminium

Light source 1 x E27

PH Snowball Louis Poulsen – Poul Henningsen

Poul Henningsen

Poul Henningsen

Born in Copenhagen, Poul Henningsen's mother was the famous Danish actress Agnes Henningsen. He never qualified as an architect, but studied at the Technical School in Frederiksberg (Denmark) from 1911 to 1914, and then at the Technical College in Copenhagen (1914-1917).

He started out practising traditional functionalist architecture, but over the years his professional interests evolved to focus mainly on lighting, which is what he is most famous for. He also branched out into writing, becoming a journalist and author. For a brief period at the start of the Second World War, he was chief architect of Tivoli Gardens in Copenhagen. But like many other creative people, he was forced to flee Denmark during the German occupation, and soon became a vital part of the Danish colony of artists living in Sweden.

His long collaboration with Louis Poulsen began in 1925 and lasted until his death. To this day, Louis Poulsen still benefits from his genius. Poul Henningsen was also the first editor-in-chief of the business magazine "NYT". Louis Poulsen's CEO at the time, Sophus Kaastrup-Olsen, offered PH the magazine because he had been sacked from the Danish newspaper he was working for (his views were too radical).

Poul Henningsen's pioneering work on the relationship between light structures, shadows, glare and colour reproduction, compared with man's need for light, remains the foundation of the lighting theories still practised by Louis Poulsen.