Evenings drift from kitchen to dining table to balcony and back, while the nicest lamp stays tethered to a single socket. The small but persistent annoyance of cords, extension leads, and the feeling that lighting never quite follows where people actually end up sitting becomes background noise. Beautiful lamps are static, and that friction quietly shapes how and where you use light, even when it should not.
Arieto Studio’s ILO Lamp is a response to that pattern. The designers started by watching their own routines, noticing how often they moved while the light did not. ILO is an attempt to let light move as naturally as people do, without turning into a tech gadget or a camping lantern, treating the portable lamp as a piece of furniture that happens to be untethered when you need it.
Designer: Hanna Billqvist (Arieto Studio)
The lamp is two elements that live together, a luminous donut that holds the light and a weighted base that stays plugged in. When the donut rests on the base, it behaves like a sculptural table lamp. When lifted, it becomes a compact, cordless light that can travel to the terrace, coffee table, or hallway without trailing cables behind it or requiring a new outlet.
The base is both a stand and an induction charger. When the donut is dropped back onto it, charging starts automatically, no ports or cables to find in the dark. This turns recharging into a background ritual, the same motion you would make when tidying a table at the end of the night, and the lamp is ready again by morning without thinking about it.
The soft, diffused glow from the ring throws gentle light across a table rather than a harsh spotlight. It is meant for calm, ambient illumination, the kind that makes late conversations feel unhurried and lets food or books sit in a pool of warm light without glare. The donut radiates evenly in all directions, so it never casts hard shadows or creates bright spots.
The donut on a balcony rail during a late drink, on a low shelf beside a sofa, or in a hallway where there is no convenient outlet shows how the same object moves between roles without looking like camping gear. It stays firmly in the language of interior objects, simple forms, rich colors, and a glow that feels like it belongs rather than borrowed from a utility drawer.
The contrast between the glossy, cream-colored ring and the solid, colored base makes the lamp read almost like a small sculpture when assembled. The base comes in several tones, burgundy, green, and blue, so it can either disappear into furniture or act as a quiet accent in a neutral room. The proportions are calm and grounded, not trying to impress with complexity.
ILO is less about showing off wireless charging and more about removing the tiny compromises that come with static lamps. It treats light as something that can follow dinners, conversations, and quiet moments, while still looking like a considered object when it comes home to its base. For people who move through their homes rather than settling in one spot all evening, a lamp that can keep up without cables or outlets starts to feel less like a luxury and more like how lighting should have worked all along.
The post ILO Lamp Lets Soft Light Wander Between Rooms first appeared on Yanko Design.

