Melbourne, Australia, mid-20th century
Planet Lighting (Planet Products), Iggulden family workshop
Painted steel, sprung counterbalanced articulated arm, conical shade
55 cm high
Serviced and rewired by KOBK 2026, new switch fitted, tested and tagged for domestic use
Every KOBK object is one of one and carries its age honestly. Expect marks, wear and patina as part of the piece; any specific fault is noted above. Where an object is photographed on a stand, the stand is included.
Notes
A proper working lamp from one of the most recognised names in Australian mid-century lighting.
Planet Lighting began as a Melbourne sideline of the Iggulden family's Bentley Manufacturing in the early 1900s, and from the late 1930s on, Bill Iggulden was building self-balancing task lamps that had no real local equivalent. His Orbit came first, the long-running I-series followed in 1938, and the Studio K of 1962 went on to be shown at the Louvre and MoMA, one of the very few pieces of truly original Australian industrial design to travel that far. The naming was deliberate: Orbit, Planet, the cosmic vocabulary of small mechanical solar systems for a desk.
The engineering is the heart of it. A sprung, counterweighted arm that holds whatever angle you leave it at, a focused cone at the end of it, and a body built to be moved a thousand times without going slack. It is a tool first, which is exactly what gives it its presence as an object on a desk now.
The mustard finish is the period detail that lifts it out of pure utility. Mid-century Australian homes liked their working pieces to carry colour: enamels on radios, telephones, kettles, and lamps that would otherwise have stayed industrial. Serviced and rewired with a new switch fitted, then tested and tagged for domestic use, so it works as it was built to. It still reads as a tool first and a collectible second. That is why it works.