This Lamp Gets Its Glow From a Fashionable Collar Worn 400 Years Ago

The ambient lighting market keeps growing, and yet most table lamps still work the same way they always have: they point light directly at you and call it a day. That’s fine if you’re reading, but it doesn’t do much for a room that needs to ease down in the evening. The growing appetite for softer, more atmospheric home lighting reflects a shift in how people want their spaces to feel, and it’s a gap that most conventional lamp designs haven’t quite caught up with.

Rachel Lamp is a considered answer to that problem: a compact table lamp that doesn’t aim its light outward at all. Instead, it bounces everything against a curved back panel to create a uniform, diffused glow across the room. What makes the design genuinely interesting is where that form came from, because the geometry behind it predates electricity by a few hundred years.

Designer: Hyunjae Noh

The inspiration is the Medici collar, a garment fashionable from the late 16th century to the early 17th century, known for a soft, curved silhouette that began at the back of the neck and swept forward along both shoulders. Noh adapted that same arc into the lamp’s reflector panel, which curves around the spherical bulb globe in a way that’s both functional and immediately recognizable. The form isn’t decorative for its own sake; it’s borrowed from history because it happens to describe the right shape.

The indirect lighting approach is the lamp’s central idea. Rather than hitting the space head-on, the G4 LED fires its light backward into the curved reflector, which then spreads it evenly outward. This removes the harsh contrast that direct lamps create, making the Rachel a natural fit for a bedroom nightstand, a living room shelf, or a desk where you’d rather not be squinting at harsh light after dark. It casts the kind of glow that a room can actually relax in.

The reflector panel isn’t just shaped to catch light; it’s also textured. A diamond pattern across its surface induces diffuse reflection, scattering the light further and keeping glare out of the equation entirely. It’s a detail that works on two levels: it gives the lamp visual texture when it isn’t on, and it does genuine optical work when it is.

The lamp ships with the main body, bulb, and lighting cover, and assembly is straightforward enough that it doesn’t need instructions to feel self-explanatory. The G4 LED is a standard format, so replacing it when the time comes isn’t a difficult or costly process. It comes in gray, white, and black, and all three colorways share the same clean, minimal silhouette that makes it easy to fit into almost any interior without having to rethink the rest of the room around it.

What’s notable about the Rachel is that the designer didn’t arrive at its form by trying to create something that looked unusual. He started with a fashion reference from the 1600s, one that happened to describe the exact geometry needed to redirect light softly and evenly, and worked outward from there. It’s a quiet kind of reasoning, and the lamp is better for it.