Imagine treating a tile as a medium for light. Not the ambient glow of a strip along the ceiling, or the directional punch of a spotlight, but something more architectural and intimate. That’s the premise behind Glowtile, a modular lighting system designed by RedDuo for the Italian lighting brand Leucos, and it’s one of those concepts that sounds obvious in retrospect, yet somehow nobody had quite pulled off this way before.
Leucos has been making handblown glass lamps since 1962, born just outside Venice where craftsmanship and artisanship have been synonymous for centuries. Over more than 60 years, the brand has built a reputation around the kind of quality that doesn’t cut corners. RedDuo is the newer voice in this partnership: a Milan-based interior design and creative studio founded in 2020 by Fabiola Di Virgilio and Andrea Rosso, two former fashion industry professionals with a material-first, fashion-informed approach to everything they do. The pairing makes sense the moment you see the result.
Glowtile works around a deceptively simple concept: glazed ceramic tiles, each fitted with an egg-shaped handblown glass diffuser set inside a ring of anodized aluminum. Two tile formats make up the system: a square 15×15 centimeter module and a rectangular 30×10 centimeter one. You can arrange them in grids, stagger them, mix both formats together, install them on walls, ceilings, or even set them on the floor to shoot light upward. It’s the same compositional freedom you’d have with any standard tiling job, except your tiles glow.
What makes this genuinely compelling is the material honesty of it. The ceramic tiles come in three finishes, all beautifully named: Chalk Blue, which reads like the inside of an old swimming pool; Oyster White, creamy and warm; and Mineral Grey, which skews more architectural and serious. Each feels considered rather than arbitrary, and the finish you choose radically changes the mood of the whole installation. Pair Chalk Blue tiles in a close grid on a wall and you get something gallery-like and almost cinematic. Spread Oyster White modules across a ceiling and the whole effect softens into something residential and dreamy.
The handblown glass diffuser deserves a moment of appreciation on its own. A glassblower gathers molten glass on the end of a long metal pipe and shapes it entirely through breath and rotation. No two pieces come out exactly the same. That built-in human irregularity, something most manufacturers would rather engineer out of their products, is here embraced as part of the whole point. Every Glowtile carries a small trace of the person who made it, which is a quietly radical thing for a modular system to hold onto.
The system made its debut at Matter and Shape in Paris on March 6, 2026, and the images from the event show off just how wide the range of Glowtile can be. In one configuration, it’s a wall-mounted composition that functions like art. In another, the pieces sit low on the floor, functioning almost like a glowing sculptural seat. That flexibility matters because lighting is a category where most products are good at exactly one thing. Glowtile seems designed by people who find that limitation boring.
Whether it ends up in mainstream interiors or stays squarely in the territory of architects and design-forward clients is an open question. The handcrafted materials and the obvious care involved in production suggest this won’t be the most affordable wall treatment you’ll consider. But cost is almost beside the point here. What Glowtile really asks is whether your wall and your light need to be two separate things. Most rooms have never been offered that question before.
For Leucos, this feels like another chapter in a quiet but genuine transformation: a brand rooted in over six decades of Venetian glass tradition that’s become increasingly curious about what lies beyond it. Collaborating with RedDuo, a studio that came from fashion rather than classical industrial design, is probably exactly why Glowtile ends up feeling like nothing else currently in this space.
The post Leucos Just Turned Ceramic Tiles Into 3D Glowing Wall Art first appeared on Yanko Design.

