Harvey Guzzini Faro Table Lamps – 1970s Catalogue Picture
Sirio table lamps, Clan table and floor lamps and an orange Faro table lamp.
Harvey Guzzini Faro Table Lamps
Maybe a prototype (pictures left), or at least a strange edition.
Notice the difference; a longer rod (63 cm – 24.80”, the other one is 57 cm – 22.44” high, also not the 60 cm as it should be), a thicker and heavy lamp base, such as the one of a floor lamp, an old VLM -switch; not the Achille Castiglioni switch from 1968 as always, a nut on the bottom of the rod, and the top is not sealed and chromed but a has a plastic closing piece. They were acquired from the first owner who claimed that the lamps had always been like this andthat there was nothing changed over the years.
Harvey Guzzini Faro Table Lamps – 1970s Catalogue Picture
Commercial codes and scheme.
Table Lamp
Project year: 1970
Year of production starting: 1970
Year of production ending: 1981
Commercial code: 2248
Period: 1970 – 1972
Commercial code: 4020
Period: 1973 – 1981
Prototypes
Prototypes of this lamp were made from 1967 until 1973.
Harvey Guzzini Faro Table Lamps – Transparant smoked plastic version
Thick chrome base and a big Achille Castiglioni D-661 foot switch made by VLM Components.
Orange version of these Harvey Guzzini Faro table lamps
Links (external links open in a new window)
iGuzzini illuminazione website
The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) film – Wikipedia
The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) film – IMDb
Le Jouet/The Toy (1976) film – Wikipedia
Le Jouet/The Toy (1976) film – IMDb
Diamant Noir (2016) film – Wikipedia
Diamant Noir (2016) film – IMDb
Man About The House (1973) TV series – Wikipedia
Man About The House (1973) TV series – IMDb
Now You See Me 2 (2016) film – Wikipedia
Now You See Me 2 (2016) film – IMDb
Sky Rojo (2021) TV series – Wikipedia
Sky Rojo (2021) TV series – IMDb
Vintageinfo Links
Harvey Guzzini Faro Table Lamps
Materials: Heavy round chromed iron base. Chrome rod. White acrylic round mushroom lampshade. Chrome lid on top. Some plastic and metal parts. Bakelite E14 sockets.
Height: 60 cm / 23.62”
Width: ∅ 33 cm / 12.99”
Base: ∅ 23 cm / 9.05”
Electricity: 2 light bulbs E14, 2 x 60 watt maximum, 110/220 volt.
Any type of light bulb can be used, but preferably a small round one. Long candlestick bulbs are visible.
Period: 1970s – Mid-Century Modern.
Designer: Harvey Guzzini, the design team of the company. Several design team names were used over the years.
Manufacturer: Harvey Guzzini, today named iGuzzini illuminazione S.p.A via Mariano Guzzini, 37. 62019, Recanati, Italy.
Other versions: These Harvey Guzzini Faro table lamps were also made as a floor lamp and a pendant lamp. The pendant lamp exists with a cord or a rise & fall mechanism. Produced in red, orange, white, transparent brown…
Faro: Italian word for lighthouse.
Acrylic: often named by its commercial name: Perspex, Plexiglas, Crylux, Acrylite, Lucite, is a thermoplastic.
Harvey Guzzini / iGuzzini illuminazione
In the late 1950s the Guzzini family from Recanati (Marche, Italy) set up a small workshop for enamelled copper objects. On 30 June 1959 the brothers Raimondo, Giovanni, Virgilio, Giuseppe and Giannunzio Guzzini, sons of Mariano Guzzini, officially founded Harvey Creazioni for the production of decorative copperware. The name “Harvey” was inspired by the 1950 film Harvey with James Stewart and his imaginary rabbit friend.
Very soon the company moved from the ground floor of the family home in Recanati to a new factory in nearby Le Grazie, where the first lamps were developed. Early lighting models were designed by external designers such as Karl Roters and Charles F. Joosten (Josteen), who had already worked for Fratelli Guzzini on plastic tableware.
In the early 1960s Harvey became a true family business when more brothers joined, and in 1962 industrial designer Luigi Massoni was brought in to lead the design team. Massoni worked for both Fratelli Guzzini and Harvey Guzzini until the mid-1970s and played a key role in the transition from enamelled copper to moulded plastics such as polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA). Under his direction the company developed many of the iconic “space age” domestic lamps that defined the brand.
During the 1960s and 1970s Harvey Guzzini became one of the standard-bearers of Italian mid-century lighting design. The in-house design office, often referred to as Studio 6G or Ufficio Progetti, and external designers created a long series of acrylic pendant, table and floor lamps that combined coloured domes, chrome details and multi-light switching. These domestic lamps were distributed widely in Europe and beyond, for example through Habitat in the UK.
Design House
In the late 1960s Harvey Guzzini also introduced the Design House (DH) label for a more explicitly “design-led” range. Under this name, the company presented its products at international exhibitions and in dedicated Design House catalogues. Lamps shown in one of these catalogues include Alicante, Noppo, Ibis, Azalea, Cigno, Moon, Selene, Poliedra, Focus, Tam Tam, Squared, Taw, Cespuglio, Nastro, Moana, Nitia, Lampione, Lucciola, Piuma and Diaframma. In 1969, Harvey Guzzini also opened a Harvey Guzzini – DH store in central Milan, underlining the more design-oriented positioning of this range.
Harveiluce
Around the same period, the Harveiluce name appeared on several models, sometimes alongside or later replaced by Harvey Guzzini or iGuzzini labels. Harveiluce was thus used only for a relatively short time in the late 1960s and early 1970s, mainly as another trade name for the same family of designs that would later be marketed under the iGuzzini brand.
DOMA
In the 1970s iGuzzini also used the Doma name for a line of plastic furniture and accessories. The Doma collection included space age storage trolleys, coat racks, chairs, ashtrays and decorative spheres, often in injection-moulded ABS with metal details, designed by Luigi Massoni, Dino Pelizza, Fabio Lenci and others. These pieces were marketed under the same corporate umbrella as Harvey Guzzini and iGuzzini lighting, and the iGuzzini logo introduced in 1974 covered products sold under sub-brands such as DH, Doma and Atelier.
iGuzzini
In 1974 the company name was changed from Harvey Guzzini to iGuzzini, and in 1981 to iGuzzini illuminazione. From the mid-1970s onwards the firm progressively shifted its focus from domestic “space age” lighting to architectural and technical lighting for public and professional spaces. Today iGuzzini is an international lighting group based in Recanati, known for collaborations with architects and designers such as Gae Aulenti, Gio Ponti, Rodolfo Bonetto, Piero Castiglioni and many others, and since 2019 it has been part of the Swedish Fagerhult Group.
In 2022–2023 iGuzzini launched the iGuzzini Echoes programme: a series of re-editions of classic 1960s–1970s designs, updated with LED technology and recycled / recyclable materials. The first models to return were Polsino (Gio Ponti, re-edition 2022) and Zurigo (Luigi Massoni, re-edition 2022), followed by Nitia (Rodolfo Bonetto, re-edition 2023), Clan (Flash, Bud, Clan) and Sorella (all credited to the historic Harvey / Harveiluce design team, re-edition 2023).
Although the brand identity and product range have evolved towards professional lighting, the vintage Harvey Guzzini domestic lamps from the 1960s and 1970s – as well as the recent Echoes re-editions – remain an important chapter in the history of Italian plastic design.
Designers
Designers who worked for the company include: Luigi Massoni, Luciano Buttura, Sergio Brazzoli, Ermanno Lampa, Giuseppe Cormio, Emilio Fabio Simion, Karl Roters, Charles F. Joosten, Fabio Lenci, Bruno Gecchelin, Gio Ponti, Rodolfo Bonetto, Gae Aulenti, Piero Castiglioni, Antonella Ducci Valera, Carlo Urbinati, Felice Ragazzo, Ennio Lucini, Cesare Casati, Gianfranco Frattini, Ambrogio Pozzi, Francesco Piccaluga, Aldo Piccaluga, Makio Hasuike, Renzo Piano, Dean Skira, Maurici Ginés, Artec Studio, Enzo Eusebi, Jean-Michel Wilmotte, Arup, Norman Foster, Mario Cucinella, Massimo Iosa Ghini, Massimiliano e Doriana Fuksas, Jean-Marie Duthilleul, Roberto Pamio, Paul Andreau, Giuseppe De Goetzen, Franco Bresciani, Studio D.A.
Lamps In The Movies!
Diamant Noir (2016)
A Harvey Guzzini Faro table lamp was used as a set decoration in the 2016 French-Belgian drama film Diamant Noir (Dark Inclusion – Dark or Black Diamond). Starring Niels Schneider, Hans-Peter Cloos and August Diehl.
Now You See Me 2 (2016)
A Harvey Guzzini Faro table lamp was used as a set decoration in the 2016 American heist thriller film Now You See Me 2. Starring Mark Ruffalo, Woody Harrelson, Jesse Eisenberg and Lizzy Caplan.
The Man with the Golden Gun (1974)
A Harvey Guzzini Faro table lamp was used as a set decoration in the 9th James Bond movie “The Man with the Golden Gun ” from 1974 with Roger Moore (1927-2017), Christopher Lee (1922-2015) and Britt Ekland (born 1942). Here on the desk of Miss Moneypenny played by Lois Maxwell (1927-2007).
Sky Rojo (2021)
A Harvey Guzzini Faro table lamp was used as a set decoration in the 2021Spanish action crime drama television series Sky Rojo, (S1E3). Starring Verónica Sánchez, Miguel Ángel Silvestre and Asier Etxeandia. Here together with a Strips table lamp from Quality System.
Le Jouet (1976)
Two orange Harvey Guzzini Faro table lamps were used as a set decoration in the French comedy film Le Jouet (The Toy) from 1976. Produced by Pierre Richard. Starring Pierre Richard and Michel Bouquet.
Man About The House (1974)
A Harvey Guzzini Faro table lamp was used as a set decoration in the 1974 British sitcom Man About The House. It appears in episode 5 of the second series. Starring Richard O’Sullivan, Paula Wilcox and Sally Thomsett.
Hellraiser (2022)
An orange Harvey Guzzini Faro table lamp was used as a set decoration in the 2022 American supernatural horror film Hellraiser. Starring Odessa A’zion, Jamie Clayton and Adam Faison. Many other Harvey Guzzini lamps appear in this movie that was filmed in Serbia. So they probably all have a Meblo label.

Logo used between 1959 and 1964. Inspired by the 1950 film “Harvey “, starring James Stewart.

Logo used between 1965 and 1977. This logo was designed by Luigi Massoni.
The architect Massoni was invited to work with Harvey as the company’s art director, a move that gave further impetus to the idea of collaborating with designers.
Between 1967 and 1971, Ennio Lucini designed the catalogue tor the DH brand, under which lamps for home lighting were marketed.

Logo used from 1974 until today, designed by Advema G&R Associati. This logo embodied the company’s entire output, which was marketed under other brands such as DH, Doma and Atelier.
It was during this period that the company began making technical products. Spot and flood lights in particular.






























