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Chaika Wall Lamp

SKU LSW-B6056-01
$119.00

A bell of green glass, lit from within.


Rediscover the elegance of a bygone era with the Chaika Wall Sconce. This exquisite piece combines a high-quality solid brass base with a stunning green embossed glass shade. As light filters through the intricate floral patterns, it casts a soft, layered green glow onto your walls — an ambiance of nostalgic serenity. With its iconic bell-shaped silhouette and the warm, brushed texture of brass, this sconce is at home in a quiet reading nook or as a sophisticated bedside accent. More than a fixture; a piece of history brought to life in a modern home.

Two Versions · One Silhouette

Choose your glass

Model A

The Green

∅ 5.7″ × H 7.1″
DIA 14.5 × H 18 CM
Model B

The Clear

∅ 5.7″ × H 7.1″
DIA 14.5 × H 18 CM

The Make

Two honest materials

Brass

Solid brass base and wall plate, brushed by hand to an antique tone — the warm anchor for the glass above.

Glass

Hand-pressed bell shade with intricate embossed floral patterns — available in green or clear glass.

Finishes
Brass Green Glass Clear Glass

The Particulars

Full specification

Materials
Brass · Glass
Finishes
Brass
Lampshade
Embossed bell glass — Green Glass (Model A) or Clear Glass (Model B)
Bulb Base
E26 / E27 — bulb not included
Voltage
AC 110 – 240 V
Wiring
Hardwired
Dimensions
∅ 5.7″ × H 7.1″ (Dia 14.5 × H 18 cm) — both versions
Suited For
Bedsides · Reading Nooks · Powder Rooms · Hallways · Library Walls
Certification
North America Europe Australia Saudi Arabia
Good to know

Bulb sold separately — fits a standard E26 or E27 base, 40 W maximum. We recommend a clear or filament bulb to read the embossed glass at its best. Each shade is hand-pressed — small variations in the floral pattern and tone are part of the craft, not a defect. Hardwired install by a qualified electrician; rated for indoor placement, away from direct moisture.

Frequently Asked

Before you order

How green is the green glass — will it overpower a neutral room?
The green is deep but translucent — closer to forest glass than bottle green. When unlit, it reads as a rich, jewel-like accent against brass; when lit, it casts a soft, dappled green wash onto the wall around it rather than tinting the whole room. In an ivory or oak-panelled space, two sconces give a warm, library-at-dusk feel; in a sage or olive room, they amplify the existing tone. If you want the colour to disappear when the light is off, choose Model B (Clear Glass) instead.
Why E26/E27 instead of a smaller candelabra base, and what bulb suits it best?
The standard Edison base is original to the silhouette — these sconces draw on a tradition where the visible filament was part of the fixture's beauty. A clear glass filament bulb at 2400–2700 K, 40 W maximum, is the right choice: the embossed glass was designed to refract a visible coil, and a frosted or opaque bulb hides exactly what the floral pattern is meant to catch. ST64, G80, or A19 filament shapes all suit the bell — bulb sold separately.
Each shade is hand-pressed — what does that mean for a matched pair?
Subtle variations are part of the craft, not a defect. Two Chaika sconces flanking a bed will read as a coordinated pair to the eye — the silhouette, dimensions, and overall colour are consistent — but a side-by-side comparison may reveal small differences in the depth of the embossed relief or the precise tone of the green, especially where the glass thickens and thins. This is the signature of a hand-made shade rather than a mass-produced one. If exact symmetry matters more than craft variation, this fixture isn't the right choice.
Will the brass change tone over time?
Yes — and this is intended. The brass is finished by hand to a warm, brushed tone rather than lacquered to a sealed shine, so it will gently deepen and soften over the years, particularly where hands occasionally touch it. Most owners consider this the point: the fixture acquires the patina of a real heirloom rather than aging into a discoloured failure. If you prefer a finish that stays exactly as delivered, this isn't the right piece.
Does it work in a modern interior, or only in traditional homes?
It works in both — and arguably looks strongest in contrast. Against a pared-back modern wall (limewash plaster, oak panelling, dark paint), the bell silhouette and green glass become a focal jewel rather than blending in. In a fully traditional interior, it reads as period-correct. The piece is mistreated only when surrounded by other competing ornament; given quiet space around it, the Chaika carries a room.

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