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Mason Jar Pendant Lamps

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Anthropologie does it again! This is the current display above the registers of the Santana Row store. If only we had soaring ceilings and a few hundred more square feet in our house, we would consider a similar installation! But wait ... Last week's design*sponge DIY project showcased a version of this look on a smaller scale.

 
 
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design*sponge DIY project

If you're as enamored by the mason jar lighting as we are, you can try this at home. You just need the jars, a hanging lamp kit and a ceiling light plate. All easy to come by. Check out the instructions at d*s.

And here's a close-up of the Anthropologie display, so you can see for yourself how similar the two projects are:

masongjarsanthroclose.JPG

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How To..., inspiration, lighting

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Comments (20)

Oh hell yes. I'm doing that tonight.
Or next week. Or maybe never.
But I'll always wish I had.

posted by alina on 2008-06-19 13:31:44
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Alina: LOL!! I say that about 1000 times every day, looking at all these design sites.

posted by spossberg on 2008-06-19 13:38:10
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Ditto on alina's comment
from now on this will be my response when my husband complains about me keeping every mason jar that enters the house.

posted by DahliaCactus on 2008-06-19 13:39:59
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Love it! they always have the best displays.

posted by ridge_van_winkle on 2008-06-19 13:40:04
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Looks like only 12 or so of the mason jars in the Anthropologie display are actually lit, and the rest are just keeping them company. This wouldn't cost too much at all to put together.

posted by AlmostAD on 2008-06-19 15:28:23
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I saw this there the other day and loved it as well. I really liked the water bottle display they had last summer where they had the water bottles hanging from the ceiling with different levels of water in them. In the sun the water condensation looked gorgeous. I love Anthropologie.

posted by girlonthem00n on 2008-06-19 16:25:31
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non-pendant solar version:
http://www.momastore.org/museum/moma/ProductDisplay_SunJar_10451_10001_36407_-1_11548_13152_null__

posted by TRUE BLUE on 2008-06-19 21:38:56
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How do you handle the heat buildup inside the jar? Guess low wattage CFLs would help some.

posted by quiltmaster on 2008-06-19 23:37:06
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I saw something similar in a martha stewart magazine a few years ago... the mason jars were hung outdoors from the branches of a big tree and candles were buring in each one. Underneath was a table set up with a really nice spread of food. Perfect dusk dinner al fresco. I swore i'd do that one day!

posted by idea chick on 2008-06-20 00:17:07
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Cancel everything. I am DIY'ing this tonight :)

-Eleazar
http://www.blogazar.com

posted by blogazar on 2008-06-20 00:17:24
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idea chick, instructions for similar project, right here, now is the time:
http://food.yahoo.com/articles/martha-stewart/channel4080137/candle-chandeliers

Best prices on crystals, here:
http://www.spectrumhome3.com/StaticPages/crystalps.htm

Use the Swarovski for brilliant sparkle, or ones marked as Austrian.

The others are pressed or molded glass. But since the jar is glass, obviously, not cut leaded crystal, I think that the long tears drops would be really cool.

posted by TRUE BLUE on 2008-06-20 00:57:07
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I saw a tourist on a Duck Boat tour in Boston taking a picture of the Anthropologie on Boylston St. as they rode by. It has that much power.

Inside, it was decorated with looked like confetti sized paper but a lot of them, strung up almost like these jars. More in shapes than random, like someone generated the design on a computer. Each sculpture in a different color paper, they've also taken to filling spaces with random shreds of paper and bookspines hacked off their books, grown out of walls, and other books open with sections of their pages folded loosely to form butterflies... hard to describe so you get the picture.

http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/65/sophisticated.html

posted by K T G on 2008-06-20 06:11:47
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Its a recycled idea. Anthro had an almost exact version of this display as one of the window display options exactly two years ago.

posted by BetsyBoo on 2008-06-20 08:39:34
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wow...very cool. The last time I went to Anthropologie, they had paper cockroaches on all the window. Don't think I want to copy that idea...

posted by inkstainedwriter on 2008-06-20 10:25:59
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Yes, it's a recycled idea -- but if we're going to give credit for the concept, it should go to Tejo Remi from the highly-influential Droog design team who did this a decade and a half before Anthro or anyone else. The Droog Milk Bottle Chandelier Lamp came out in the early 1990's -- they were among the first industrial designers to seriously explore the concept of re-purposing.

posted by lightspeed on 2008-06-20 11:38:11
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i think it's a fabulous idea, agree with many of you that it is a recycled idea. however I feel that anthropologie manages to take a recyled idea and make it look phenomenal and new. also - thanks true blue for the link on how to do similar.

posted by texgirl on 2008-06-20 12:08:54
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Actually, the credit should go to my uncle Ted, who locked himself in his basement for three days in 1989, with only a bare lightbulb and a jar of pickles. He ate the pickles and made a lamp out of the jar, which Tejo read about in the news.

(kidding lightspeed :)

posted by superflyguy on 2008-06-20 12:45:28
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This article I had found earlier about Anthropologie "marketing" strategy reminded me of this:
http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/la/look/adler-knockoff-at-target-053675
and how I feel when I'm in that store, like buying that stuff in that atmosphere is more special somehow. It's superficially designed to make you think so, in fact.

posted by K T G on 2008-06-20 20:52:03
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Great idea, and thanks for the how to link.

posted by rm33 on 2008-06-22 13:51:48
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Wow, what a fun idea.. love it!

posted by sugarplum on 2008-06-23 14:14:29
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