Vintageinfo – All About Vintage Lighting

All texts and images are copyright © Vintageinfo.be. Copying is not allowed, including for webshops or commercial use.
All Rights Reserved. Please share by linking, not copying. Thank you!

PayPal

Last 5 Viewed

Brass & acrylic tripod desk lamp 2 white Perspex parts conical ball-ending rods 1950s 1960s Cosack GermanyTemde hat table lamp red conical metal base bowler lampshade 1950s 1960s Germany Switzerland E27 socketFase Boomerang 64 desk lamp red metal base curved white rod round lampshade 1960s 1970s SpainKandem LBL red Bakelite desk lamp moulded light VEB Leuchtenbau Leipzig Germany 1950s Marianne BrandtFase Impala Desk Lamp 1970s design curved stainless steel inox metal base & lampshade & clock Spain
1950s VEB Leuchtenbau table lamp design: Lutz Rudolf round green base conical tube mushroom lampshade 1960s1950s VEB Leuchtenbau Table Lamp 8
1950s VEB Leuchtenbau table lamp design: Lutz Rudolf round green base conical tube mushroom lampshade 1960s1950s VEB Leuchtenbau Table Lamp 7
1950s VEB Leuchtenbau table lamp design: Lutz Rudolf round green base with built-in white plastic switch1950s VEB Leuchtenbau Table Lamp 5
1950s VEB Leuchtenbau table lamp design: Lutz Rudolf round green base conical tube mushroom lampshade 1960s1950s VEB Leuchtenbau Table Lamp 4
1950s VEB Leuchtenbau table lamp design: Lutz Rudolf round green base conical tube mushroom lampshade 1960s1950s VEB Leuchtenbau Table Lamp 3
1950s VEB Leuchtenbau table lamp design: Lutz Rudolf round green base conical tube mushroom lampshade 1960s1950s VEB Leuchtenbau Table Lamp 2
1950s VEB Leuchtenbau table lamp design: Lutz Rudolf round green base conical tube mushroom lampshade 1960s1950s VEB Leuchtenbau Table Lamp 9

1950s VEB Leuchtenbau Table Lamp

Materials: Round mint green painted iron base. Round black labelled lid on the bottom of the base. Cast iron counterweight inside the base. Conical tube in the middle, perforated with elongated slots. Round iron mushroom style lampshade, also in mint green paint. Ornamental brass nut on top. Some metal parts. Bakelite E27 socket.

Height: 36 cm / 14.17”

Width: 33 cm / 12.99”

Base: ∅ 13,5 cm / 5.31”

Electricity: 1 bulb E27, 1 x 40 watt maximum, 110/220 volt.
Any type of light bulb can be used, not a specific one preferred.

Period: 1950s, 1960s – Mid-Century Modern.

Designer: Lutz Rudolf (1936 – 2011) – attributed.

Manufacturer: VEB Leuchtenbau, Lengefeld, Germany.

This 1950s VEB Leuchtenbau table lamp has a date stamp printed on the bottom of the base: June 25, 1958 and a number 7204, probably the model number.

The Polish company Stołeczne Zakłady produced a table lamp in this style, but the differences are big enough not to be confused with this lamp.

VEB Leuchtenbau

The VEB Leuchtenbau company was founded in 1900 as Wittig und Schwabe Metalldruckwarenfabriken (Metal Printing Factories), Lengefeld. Right after World War II in 1946, the name changed into VEB Leuchtenbau. In 1963 they manufactured some 1.5 million lamps, of which 80% were exported. In 1965 they produced 120 different models of lamps.

One of the most famous lamps produced by VEB Leuchtenbau is the Kontrast floor lamp, designed by Lutz Rudolf in 1961, when he was 25. The manufacturer himself doubted the success of “this thing” and planned only a small number of pieces.

However, the production was carried through until 1975, in which 11,000 pieces were produced. The GDR citizens at that time were fortunate that the product landed mainly on the domestic East German market, which was not the case with all the design objects. Despite colourfully designed variants, the majority of customers opted for the original, simple-white design of the lampshades of this floor lamp.

Other designers that worked for VEB Leuchtenbau are: Peter Beyer, Klaus Neubert, Theo Schröder, Christian Wagner

VEB: Volks Eigener Betrieb – Publicly-owned business. VEB was the main legal form of industrial enterprise in the communist East Germany.

AKA ELECTRIC was the trademark for electrical household appliances, lights and vehicle electrics in the GDR

In 1969, 15 of the most important electro-technical, electronic and photo-optical producers in the GDR were merged to form the Volkseigener Betriebe Elektrischer Konsumgüter. The Publicly-owned business  of Electrical Consumer Goods.

1950s VEB Leuchtenbau Table Lamp – Catalogue Picture

1950s VEB Leuchtenbau Table Lamp - Catalogue Picture

Many thanks to Wojtek of Modernretro2012 for the beautiful pictures. You can find his shop online on Ebay over here.