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Natevo Furniture — Italian Design That Lights Itself
Natevo makes furniture that doesn’t wait for a lamp to do its job. The brand was founded by Flou as a dedicated line of pieces with integrated LED lighting—tables, bookcases, consoles, mirrors, nightstands—engineered so the furniture can illuminate the room on its own. It isn’t a gimmick; it’s a quieter way to stage light and space, with the electronics hidden and the glow designed into the structure.
Natevo by Flou — A Clear Lineage, A Clear Brief
The DNA comes straight from Flou’s obsession with comfort and practical elegance. In 2013, Flou spun up Natevo as a distinct brand, keeping production in Italy and focusing the brief on “furniture with integrated LED light that can independently light the environment.” In practice, that means fewer floor lamps, cleaner plans, and a softer, more architectural light in living rooms and bedrooms.
Natevo Chiaro di Luna — The Signature Glow
“Chiaro di Luna” is the icon for a reason. The Natevo Chiaro di Luna bedside table curves a metal mesh into a slender cylinder, then tucks an LED panel into the lower shelf so the piece becomes both furniture and light source. Finishes range from anodic bronze and burnished tones to matte whites and a polished gold; tops can be bronzed or clear glass, and the lower shelf can be metal, marble from Flou’s palette, or the integrated LEDs. The Chiaro di Luna family expands beyond the night table into small tables, a writing desk, a bench, and a console with pouf—same language, different uses.
Natevo Collections & Designers — From Solida to Kara, Alba, CCLight
Natevo works with designers who understand restraint. Matteo Nunziati’s “Solida” speaks in rationalist lines—table, bookcase, dresser—with light built in rather than added on. Across the catalogue you’ll see names like Kara, Alba, and CCLight appear as highlights, each using LEDs to sketch atmosphere without visible tech. It’s furniture first, illumination as a native feature.
What Lives in the Natevo Catalogue
This is a full ecosystem, not a single trick. Natevo furniture spans tables and small tables, bookcases and dressers, makeup vanities and desks, mirrors, clothing racks, storage units and more—each designed so the light is part of the object. The effect is tidy: fewer cords, fewer fixtures, more control over mood.
Natevo in Real Rooms — Projects with a Nighttime Pulse
Look at Natevo’s residential projects and you’ll see why the concept works. A Flou bedroom anchored by a Baia bed pairs naturally with Natevo Chiaro di Luna night tables; the bedside glow is soft, directional, and enough for the space. In other rooms, CCLight bookcases fold LEDs into the uprights so the shelves become quiet light sources, not just storage. It’s lighting you live with, not lighting that interrupts the room.
Why Natevo, Not Another Lamp
Because Natevo furniture cleans up the plan. A Natevo console lights the entry without a table lamp. A Natevo mirror throws a halo that flatters faces instead of casting hard shadows. A Natevo desk gives task light with no clamp-ons. The house rhythm stays calm and the sightlines stay clean. And since the fixtures are built into the furniture, the glow reads as part of the design language rather than an afterthought.
Sustainability Logic that Actually Makes Sense
There’s a practical upside: integrated LEDs mean efficient sources, fewer redundant lamps, and less visual clutter. Natevo’s partners point to lower energy use and reduced impact as a natural consequence of the “one object, one light” principle—design that works harder instead of adding more stuff.
The Relationship — Natevo, a Flou Trademark
Natevo is a proprietary trademark of Flou S.p.A., based in Meda, and sits alongside the parent brand’s broader “total living” portfolio. That shared infrastructure shows in finishes, marbles, and the overall fit and finish. It feels like the same family—just with light as the lead character.
The Takeaway
Natevo is for people who want the glow without the gear. The furniture is the light: Natevo Chiaro di Luna by the bed, a Natevo console in the hall, a Natevo mirror where you actually get ready, bookcases like CCLight where the shelves set the mood. It’s less about spectacle, more about living well with objects that earn their footprint—Italian design that looks composed at noon and even better at midnight.





































