An industrial background rooted in photography, evolving into retail design, and then shaping interior lighting.
From April 8 to 13, 2025, LEUCOS returned to Euroluce (Hall 6, Stand C30) with an immersive experience blending timeless icons and cutting-edge design.
Designed by ALU, the stand led visitors through 2025’s innovations in a journey that expressed the brand’s dialogue between past and future.
At the entrance, a luminous sign with the LEUCOS logo dominated the space, you spotted it from afar.
Manfrotto tripods and accessories, used as supports for hanging lamps, created a studio-like atmosphere, symbolizing a passing of the torch: a legacy from professional lighting to the world of interior lighting.
In collaboration with: Unifor x LessLess and Minotti x Klasen Stool.
The heart of the exhibition was dedicated to Stripe, the brand’s first non-glass collection, designed by Mayice Studio.
A significant and symbolic choice, it highlights LEUCOS’ exploration of alternative materials. This minimalistic metal system interacts with space through reflections, rotations, and light play. Its sleek silhouettes integrate seamlessly into walls, ceilings, and floors, available in stainless steel, terracotta and yellow finishes.
Opposite to Stripe, Gill was placed to create a dialogue between innovation and tradition, honoring the brand’s roots while celebrating its history.
Designed by Roberto Pamio in 1962, Gill was the first lamp ever presented by LEUCOS. It returns in its original transparent blown glass version, with the iconic white spot, now improved with a new metallic structure supporting the diffuser.
Continuing the natural flow of the stand, visitors came across OR, a new wall and ceiling collection designed by Patrick Jouin, one of LEUCOS’ long-time collaborators.
OR wraps the walls with interlocking brass and silver circles, creating depth and movement through sophisticated light plays.
Stacking, designed by David Rockwell, expands with wall compositions that highlight the purity of borosilicate glass with traditional techniques like Venetian rigadin, the new millerighe finish, and PVD finishes in blue or titanium.
Aella, designed by Toso & Massari in 1986, reintroduces the special “Openworked” version launched in 2024, now with added color variations.