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Philips Valencia table lamp eclipse style chrome glazed ceramic globe lampshade 1960s 1970s The Netherlands no Marcello Cuneo design
Philips Valencia table lamp eclipse style chrome glazed ceramic globe lampshade 1960s 1970s The Netherlands no Marcello Cuneo designPhilips Valencia Table Lamp 4
Philips Valencia table lamp eclipse style chrome glazed ceramic globe lampshade 1960s 1970s The Netherlands no Marcello Cuneo designPhilips Valencia Table Lamp 1
Philips Valencia table lamp eclipse style chrome glazed ceramic globe lampshade back 1960s 1970s The NetherlandsPhilips Valencia Table Lamp 12
Philips Valencia table lamp eclipse style chrome glazed ceramic globe lampshade opened lid inside view E14 light bulb 1960s 1970s design Philips Valencia Table Lamp 3
Philips Valencia table lamp eclipse style chrome glazed ceramic globe lampshade top view holed lid 1960s 1970s design Philips Valencia Table Lamp 2
Philips Valencia table lamp eclipse style chrome glazed ceramic globe lampshade + shipping box 1960s 1970s design The NetherlandsPhilips Valencia Table Lamp 6
Philips Valencia table lamp eclipse style chrome glazed ceramic globe lampshade bottom Philips label & name 40 watt E14 socket 1960s 1970sPhilips Valencia Table Lamp 7
Philips Valencia table lamp white plastic plug & VLM 475 switch design: Achille Castiglioni ItalyPhilips Valencia Table Lamp 5

Philips Valencia Table Lamp

Materials: Eclipse style chrome glazed ceramic globe base & lampshade. Chrome glazed ceramic lid with 5 holes on top. Some metal parts. Bakelite E14 socket.

Height: 19 cm / 7.48”

Width: ∅ 19 cm / 7.48”

Electricity: 1 bulb E14, 1 x 40 watt maximum, 110/220 volt.
Not any type of light bulb can be used. A small round one is necessary.

Period: 1960s, 1970s – Mid-Century Modern.

Designer: To be appraised.

Manufacturer: Koninklijke Philips, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.

Other versions: This Philips Valencia table lamp comes in a few colours. Another lamp from this series, also an eclipse style lamp and also made in ceramic, is called Venezia. You can find it over here. It is made by the Italian ceramics company SC3. This lamp was also made by this company and sold by Philips. 

Koninklijke Philips N.V.

Inspired by the fast-growing electricity industry and by the promising results of Gerard Philips’ own experiments with reliable carbon filaments, his father, the Jewish banker Frederik Philips from Zaltbommel, financed the purchase of a small factory in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, on 15 May 1891.

The first years were difficult and the company was close to bankruptcy, but in 1895 Gerard’s younger brother Anton Philips joined the firm. With Anton’s commercial drive the family business expanded very quickly and the Philips brothers turned the lamp factory into the basis of what would become a major international electronics company.

To secure the supply of lamp parts, Philips very early started to make things in-house: its own machines, its own glass (from 1916) and even its own gas separation to fill lamps with argon, so it was less dependent on German suppliers during wartime. This strong vertical integration became typical for Philips and later also supported radio and medical products.

From the 1920s onward Philips did not only make lamps but also radios and even ran its own shortwave stations (PCJ and PHOHI) to promote them worldwide – an early mix of product and broadcasting.

In later sources the “first Philips shaver” is sometimes put in the early 1930s, but Philips itself dates the electric Philishave to 1939; in any case it shows how the company moved from lighting into small household and personal devices.

On 9 May 1940, the day before the German invasion, the Philips family left for the United States with a large part of the company’s capital. From there they continued operations as the North American Philips Company and kept control over the group during the war. After 1945 the headquarters returned to the Netherlands, again in Eindhoven.

After the war Philips became a broad technology group: radios, televisions, X-ray and medical equipment, and of course lighting, which remained one of its core businesses for decades. Only much later, in 2016, the lighting activities were split off and continued under the name Signify – all vintage Philips luminaires on this site belong to the period when lighting was still an integral part of Philips.

Today Philips is mainly a health-technology company. The roots are still in Eindhoven, but since 2025 the head office is in Amsterdam (Prinses Irenestraat 59).