About Neverending Glory Floor Lamp
Design
The Lasvit Neverending Glory La Scala Floor Lamp carries the silhouette of an icon. Designers Jan Plecháč and Henry Wielgus traced the outline of a historic chandelier, then rotated it around its axis to form a sculptural profile. The result is a clear, confident form that nods to La Scala in Milan without feeling nostalgic. It’s an homage made modern, translated from ceiling to floor with an easy sense of proportion.
The piece reads as one flowing volume of glass, neither fussy nor minimal. Lines stay smooth, curves feel deliberate, and the stance is calm. It looks composed whether lit or off, and it holds its own in a room without shouting. That quiet presence is the point.
Materials & Build
At its core is hand‑formed clear glass set against a matte white lacquered frame (RAL 9010). The contrast is subtle and clean. Dimensions are considered: length 17.7 in (450 mm) and width 17.3 in (440 mm). Weight is 19.8 lb (9 kg), giving reassuring stability without bulk. As with true handmade glass, small bubbles and gentle shade variations can occur; they speak to the process and keep each piece distinctly its own.
Comfort
Light through clear glass feels open and airy. It gives the room a crisp glow, not heavy, not dull. The form shapes the illumination in an inviting way, so the lamp works for a quiet corner as well as a social space. And because the silhouette is familiar yet refined, the eye relaxes around it. The room does, too.
Placement & Lifestyle
This floor lamp sits beautifully beside a sofa, flanking a reading chair, or anchoring an entry. The matte white finish blends with pale walls and soft neutrals, but it also sharpens darker schemes—charcoal, navy, walnut. Place it where a sculptural note is needed and where clarity of light matters. It pairs well with clean-lined upholstery, yet it also tempers ornate interiors. Move it closer for intimacy, or let it stand a little away to draw the gaze from across the room.
Longevity
Neverending Glory endures because it’s grounded in a silhouette that has already proven its place in cultural spaces. The materials are honest—glass and lacquer—so the piece ages with grace when treated thoughtfully. No overwrought detail to tire of, just a balanced form that stays relevant as rooms evolve. And those slight handmade variations? They don’t date the lamp. They make it personal, which is the kind of luxury that lasts.






















