Brushed Bronze Branches · Hand-Cast Ceramic Blossoms · Cascading Estate Chandelier
A vertical cascading chandelier rendered as a single botanical branch in metal — hand-forged brass branches drop from the canopy in a tapering vertical column, populated with 21 hand-cast ceramic bell-shape blossoms. Each blossom conceals a G4 lamp, so the fixture reads as a constellation of glowing flowers on a downward-falling branch rather than a chandelier with visible bulbs.
Built for stairwells, double-height foyers, atrium drops, and grand entry halls — the form is taller than wide (∅ 91.5 × H 197 cm / ∅ 36″ × H 77.6″), engineered to fall through tall vertical space rather than spread horizontally. Hand-cast ceramic flowers and individually positioned bronze branches mean each piece carries unique character. Suited to luxury hotel atriums, restaurant entries, gallery spaces, formal foyers in 4,000+ sq ft residences, and contemporary-classical, Japandi, eclectic-modern, and Art Nouveau-inspired interiors.
Features
Hand-Cast Ceramic Blossoms
21 hand-cast bell-shape ceramic flowers, individually positioned — soft white finish diffuses light evenly.
Hand-Forged Brass Branches
Tapered cascading branch network forged from solid brass, finished in your choice of three patinas.
Vertical Cascading Form
197 cm (77.6″) tall — built specifically for stairwells, atriums, and double-height vertical drops.
Finish — Choose at Checkout
Brushed Dark Bronze
Deep aged bronze with a brushed grain — the heritage finish, as pictured. Suits warm contemporary, transitional, and Japandi interiors.
Brushed Silver
Cool brushed silver tone — anchors modern, gallery, Scandinavian, and Art Nouveau interiors with a lighter visual weight.
White
Soft satin white branches — disappears into pale walls and ceilings, letting the ceramic blossoms read as the focal point.
Hand-forged brass & hand-cast ceramic. Every branch, leaf, and blossom is shaped by hand — subtle variation in branch angle, blossom positioning, and ceramic glaze depth between pieces is part of the artisanal character. The brushed-finish metalwork carries deeper recesses and brighter highlights. Allow time after unpacking for branches to settle; minor reshaping may be needed at install.
Important bulb requirement — AC 110V G4 only. This fixture uses G4 bi-pin base bulbs at line voltage AC 110V (not the more common low-voltage 12V G4 bulbs). Installing 12V bulbs will burn them out immediately and may damage the fixture. Always specify "AC 110V G4" or "G4 line voltage" when purchasing replacement bulbs. For 220–240V markets, please contact us before ordering.
Estate-scale fixture — reinforced ceiling support required. The Churippu is a substantial hand-forged brass fixture; weight exceeds the rated load of standard residential ceiling junction boxes. Your electrician and structural engineer must confirm joist support and install a heavy-duty fixture brace before installation. Please contact us before ordering for current weight estimates and shipping logistics.
Product Notes
∅ 91.5 × W 91.5 × H 197 cm
21 Heads · ∅ 36″ × W 36″ × H 77.6″ · 19.7″ hanging chain
| Materials | Hand-forged brass branch armature · Hand-cast ceramic bell-shape blossoms (×21) |
| Finish | Brushed Dark Bronze · Brushed Silver · White · choose at checkout |
| Blossom Color | Soft white ceramic (as pictured) |
| Style | Botanical sculptural · cascading branch · vertical-drop estate chandelier |
| Configuration | 21 lights · single configuration · vertical cascading column |
| Dimensions | ∅ 91.5 × W 91.5 × H 197 cm · ∅ 36″ × W 36″ × H 77.6″ |
| Weight | Substantial · structural ceiling support required · contact for weight at order |
| Bulb Base | G4 bi-pin base · AC 110V line-voltage · 21 bulbs · not included · DO NOT use 12V low-voltage G4 bulbs |
| Bulbs Recommended | Warm white 2700K–3000K G4 line-voltage LED, max 20W incandescent equivalent each (lower wattage prevents heat exposure to ceramic blossoms) |
| Color Temperature | Depends on bulbs chosen · warm white recommended for ambient atmosphere through ceramic |
| Dimming | Compatible if dimmable G4 line-voltage LEDs and a TRIAC dimmer are installed |
| Voltage | AC 110V standard · 220–240V available on request for international projects |
| Mounting | Hardwired pendant · 50 cm (19.7″) hanging chain supplied, adjustable on-site · custom chain extensions for tall stairwells available · heavy-duty ceiling brace + structural joist support required |
| Recommended Ceiling Height | Minimum 12 ft (3.6 m) for proper drop · best at 16–25 ft (4.9–7.5 m) double-height stairwells, atriums, and vertical entries |
| Customization | Custom finish, dimensions, and total head count available — contact us before ordering for project-specific specifications |
| SKU | RDC-153224 |
| Lead Time | Made-to-order · estate-grade fixtures typically require extended production · contact us for current timeline |
| Trade & Project | Designer specification packets, trade pricing, and project-quantity coordination available · please contact for project-specific quotes |
| Best For | Stairwells & double-height vertical drops · Grand foyers · Hotel atriums · Restaurant entries · Gallery spaces · Formal entries in 4,000+ sq ft residences · Contemporary-classical, Japandi, eclectic-modern & Art Nouveau-inspired interiors |
Installation
- Specialist installation strongly recommended. Given the cascading vertical form (197 cm tall) and 21 individually-positioned ceramic blossoms, this fixture should not be installed by general handymen — engage a chandelier installer or a licensed electrician with experience in estate-grade fixtures.
- Structural ceiling support is required. A heavy-duty fixture brace must be anchored to ceiling joists; standard residential junction boxes are not rated for this weight. Consult a structural engineer if joist spans are unclear.
- Hanging chain supplied at 50 cm (19.7″); chain length can be adjusted on-site for ceiling height. Custom chain extensions essential for stairwell drops — please specify your ceiling-to-floor measurement at order.
- Brass branches ship in protected sections; on-site assembly time is significant — allow at least a full day of skilled installer work for unpacking, structural mounting, branch positioning, and ceramic blossom adjustment.
- Use only AC 110V G4 line-voltage LED bulbs — the more common 12V low-voltage G4 bulbs will burn out and may damage the fixture. Specify "AC 110V G4" or "G4 line voltage" when buying replacements.
- Verify ceiling clearance: minimum 12 ft (3.6 m) for proper drop, ideally 16–25 ft for stairwell and atrium applications. Verify horizontal clearance: 4 ft minimum from any wall in any direction given the 91.5 × 91.5 cm horizontal footprint.
- Indoor only · clean ceramic blossoms periodically with a soft dry microfiber cloth; clean brushed-metal branches with a soft dry cloth — avoid liquid sprays.
Downloads
FAQ
What size space is the Churippu designed for? +
This is an estate-scale vertical-cascading fixture. At ∅ 36″ × H 77.6″ (91.5 × 197 cm), it's built specifically for stairwells, double-height foyers, atrium drops, and grand entries with significant vertical real estate. It needs minimum 12 ft (3.6 m) ceilings to read in proportion, ideally 16–25 ft (4.9–7.5 m) for full visual impact. Horizontal clearance: at least 4 ft from any wall to allow the branch silhouette to read.
What bulbs does it take? Why does the voltage matter? +
G4 bi-pin base bulbs at AC 110V line voltage — 21 bulbs total, one per ceramic blossom. This is critical: the more common G4 bulbs sold in retail stores are 12V low-voltage for under-cabinet lighting and won't work in this fixture — installing them will burn out the bulbs immediately and may damage the wiring. Always specify "AC 110V G4" or "G4 line voltage" when buying replacements. We recommend warm-white 2700K–3000K LED at 20W incandescent equivalent (~2W actual draw) per blossom.
Which finish should I pick? +
Brushed Dark Bronze (pictured) is the warmest, most heritage-feeling option — the deep aged tone reads sophisticated against rich-walled rooms and warm wood floors, and suits Japandi, contemporary-classical, and warm-modern interiors. Brushed Silver is a cooler, more contemporary finish that works against pale walls and modern minimalist schemes. White lets the ceramic blossoms read as the focal point — the branches recede, ideal for ceilings where the structure shouldn't compete with the blossoms.
Do you offer custom finishes, sizes, or configurations? +
Yes — this is a made-to-order workshop fixture, and we welcome customization. Common requests include alternative metal patinas (antique gold, blackened brass, custom finishes), adjusted dimensions for specific stairwells or atriums, varied total head count, and 220–240V variants for international installations. Please contact us before ordering with your specification — custom builds extend lead time.
Do you offer trade pricing for designers and project quantities? +
Yes. We work with interior designers, architects, hospitality groups, and estate-construction firms on specification packets, trade pricing, and project-quantity coordination. For matched chandelier-and-sconce families across a project, or coordinated branch fixtures across multiple stairwells, please contact us with your specification at the earliest stage of the project.
How is the chandelier shipped and assembled? +
The fixture ships in multiple custom-built crates with branch sections and ceramic blossoms protected for transit. Freight delivery is required — please confirm your delivery address has appropriate access (truck approach, doorway clearance, ceiling clearance for crates and assembly) before ordering. On-site assembly is significant given the branch network and individually-positioned blossoms — allow at least a full day of skilled installer work. We provide installation guidance documentation, but on-site installation is arranged by you.
Is the Churippu dimmable? +
Yes, with the right bulbs. Each blossom takes a G4 line-voltage (AC 110V) bulb. Install dimmable G4 line-voltage LED bulbs on a TRIAC wall dimmer and all 21 blossoms dim smoothly together — the gradient effect across the cascading branch is one of the fixture's strongest atmospheric properties. Warm white 2700K–3000K is essential to the ambient ceramic-glow effect.
- Unique shape design
- Made responsibly
- High quality material
- Tested for durability
CARE
CARE
- Dust with a soft, dry cloth.
- To protect finish, we do not recommend the use of household cleaners or abrasives.
- Do not exceed specified wattage.
SHIPPING & RETURN POLICY
SHIPPING & RETURN POLICY
Enjoy free shipping on all products. With Front Door Delivery, your item ships from our Distribution Center via UPS within 2–3 business days and arrives at your home in 4–6 weeks. Eligible items may be returned within 30 days of receipt. Made-to-order items are not eligible for return.
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OFF
Use this code at checkout to enjoy a 10% discount on your entire purchase.
The metal that holds
the light of years.
Brass is the alloy civilisations reach for when they want light to last. Door pulls polished by three generations. Naval instruments still readable a century after the ship was scrapped. Church candelabra that outlive the parish. Radilum's American Brass Collection is built on that same expectation — fixtures forged from H65 cartridge brass, finished by hand, sealed against time, and meant to be the lamp your grandchildren still recognise.
The alloy that refuses to age.
Brass is a brass-zinc alloy whose first known smelting dates to roughly 500 BCE in the eastern Mediterranean — Greek artisans alloying calamine ore with native brass to produce a metal that struck like gold but bent like a tool. By the Roman imperial period, brass was the material of coinage, military fittings, and the household lamps that lit late-republic Rome. Two and a half millennia later it remains, by an enormous margin, the most-used non-ferrous engineering alloy on the planet — and the lighting industry's quiet workhorse.
What makes brass uniquely fit for lighting is a coincidence of properties no single-element metal achieves. Brass gives it warm chromatic depth and the specific red-yellow that reads as luxurious rather than industrial. Zinc hardens the alloy enough to hold sharp turned profiles, threaded fittings, and cast detail without the fragility of pure brass or the dullness of pure brass castings. The blend produces a metal that is workable when you need it to be — and rigid for the next century.
Of the dozen brass grades available to manufacturers, Radilum specifies H65 cartridge brass — 65% brass, 35% zinc. The name comes from its original use: military shell casings, where the metal had to absorb the shock of firing without splitting. That same toughness, applied to a lamp arm, means the part stays dimensionally stable under decades of thermal cycling, hardware tightening, and bulb replacement. Lower-brass alloys (H62, H59) are cheaper but more brittle. We do not use them.
The Radilum brass collection is built on a simple recognition that the wider lighting industry has spent the last two decades forgetting: that the cost difference between a true brass fixture and a brass-plated zinc one is measurable in years of service, not dollars at checkout.
Four properties that change everything
about how a lamp ages.
Most fixture materials are chosen for what the lamp looks like in the showroom photograph. Brass is one of the very few materials that earns its place over the next thirty years. The differences come down to four physical and aesthetic properties.
01 Mass that reads as quality
Solid H65 brass has a density of 8.5 g/cm³ — denser than steel, denser than cast iron, more than three times the weight of zinc-die-cast. A brass sconce of comparable size to a brass-plated zinc one will weigh nearly four times as much. You feel the difference the moment you lift the box. It's not marketing — it's chemistry.
02 Living finish, not a coating
Brass-plated finishes are paint that happens to be metallic. They scratch, chip, and reveal cheaper alloy underneath. Solid brass is the finish — what you see is the metal itself, polished or patinated. A scratch on plated brass is a flaw; a scratch on solid brass is a wear mark that polishes back out. This is why brass instruments survive a century of touring while plated hardware ages out of fashion in five years.
03 Naturally antimicrobial
Brass alloys are oligodynamic — meaning their surface ions disrupt microbial cell membranes on contact. The EPA registers solid brass and bronze as antimicrobial surfaces. A brass switch plate, lamp pull, or door fitting is meaningfully cleaner than the stainless steel equivalent. For high-touch fixtures (bedside lamps, hallway sconces) this matters more than the brochures usually mention.
04 A spectrum the eye reads as warm
Brass reflects light selectively across the visible spectrum — absorbing slightly more blue and green, reflecting more red and yellow. The result is that any light source mounted in or near a brass fixture acquires a faint warm wash. We design the LED specification with this shift in mind: a 2700K bulb behind brass reads as roughly 2550K to the eye, the colour of late-afternoon window light.
Six finishes. Six different conversations
between metal and room.
A single block of H65 can be finished in a dozen ways — and the finish, more than any other variable, decides the personality of the fixture. The atelier maintains six standard finishes and adds custom patinas on request. Physical samples are sent before final order on every project of three fixtures or more.
- Reflectivity~85%
- SealantIncralac
- Best forFormal rooms
- Reflectivity~35%
- TextureLinear satin
- Best forMost projects
- ToneAmber to black
- VariationEach unique
- Best forVintage interiors
- Reflectivity~5%
- EdgesBrass glint
- Best forModern luxe
- SealantNone
- PatinaContinuous
- Best forHeritage homes
- PlatingSatin nickel
- BodySolid H65
- Best forCool palettes
Beyond the six standard finishes — verdigris greens, oil-rubbed bronze, mirror-polished rose, custom matched samples on request. Discuss specifics with your project lead.
Four stages, weeks of hand work,
one lamp.
Every Radilum brass fixture moves through four production stages. We document each stage with timestamped photography that ships to the client with the order — not because the photographs sell anything, but because they're the only way to prove that what we say happened actually happened.
CNC tooling from the designer's drawing.
A designer's sketch becomes a parametric 3D model, then a five-axis CNC tool path, then the steel mould. Every dimension held to ±0.1 mm. We tool every fixture in-house.
H65 brass, sand-cast or forged.
H65 ingots melted to 1080°C — sand-cast for sculptural pieces, precision-forged for structural arms. Cast pieces receive a stress-relief anneal cycle to prevent later cracking.
Four to six grits, by one technician.
A single technician carries each fixture through four to six polishing stages — 240 grit to felt-wheel buff. The technician's mark is etched on the fitting plate.
Multi-layer sealant, tested for 25 years.
Three coats of imported Incralac — the conservation-grade lacquer used by museums on bronze sculpture. Accelerated-aging tests project 25+ years tarnish-free.
Five archetypes — the working portfolio.
Most projects begin from one of five standard categories. Every category scales from intimate residential to full-room hospitality; every category accepts any of the six standard finishes; every category ships UL-listed for North America (CE/SAA available on request).
Three principles drawn from two centuries
of American interior design.
The Radilum American Brass Collection is shaped by three lineages — Federal-era neoclassical proportion, the early-20th-century Arts & Crafts movement, and the mid-century industrial vernacular. The result is a portfolio that reads as American not because it is decorated with eagles and stars, but because it carries the same restraint and structural honesty that those three traditions share.
Restraint & Proportion
From Federal-era cabinetry: symmetry, balance, restraint. Arms stepped at golden-ratio intervals. Canopies sized to match the column they descend from. Nothing is decorative for decoration's sake. The grandeur is in the proportion, not the ornament.
Structural Honesty
From the Arts & Crafts vocabulary: function expressed, never disguised. Joinery shows. Fasteners are visible and intentional. The arm of a sconce is shaped because it must support a bulb — and that shape is the design. Nothing pretends to be what it isn't.
Classic Shades
From mid-century industrial: opal milk glass, fluted glass, woven linen, perforated metal mesh. Each shade has a hundred-year vocabulary behind it. We pair the shade to the fixture's intended room — not the photographer's preference for what reads on social media.
From first email to final install — one specialist, six to twelve weeks.
Every Radilum brass project is led by one project specialist from the day the brief arrives through the day the fixture lights up. There is no handover between sales, design, production, and shipping. The same person who answers your first email follows the polishing photographs and tracks the freight forwarder.
Begin with a brief, or a finish sample.
Whether you need a single bedside sconce or a hundred matched fixtures for a hospitality build-out, the first step is the same — write to us. The project specialist who reads your email is the one you'll work with from brief to install. Every email gets a real reply within 24 hours.
Fast Shipping
4-6 weeks for delivery
North American Certification
North American Certification Overview
Safety Payment
Secure payment with Multiple Credit Cards.
Measuring for Pendant Lighting
When installing pendants and chandeliers, it’s important to consider how you want your fixtures to hang in relation to the other furnishings in your space. Read on for our recommendations on how to hang the perfect light.
Kitchen
Aim for 30–36″ from the bottom of your fixture’s shade to the top of your island or countertop. Space multiple pendants 26–30″ apart. For a sense of proportion and balance, allow 12″ from the outermost fixture to the edge of your counter.
Dining Room
For optimal lighting and visibility, the bottom of your pendant should sit 30″ from the surface of your dining table. To scale your fixture, take the length and width of the room in feet, then convert that to inches. For a 10′ by 14′ room, the chandelier should be about 24″ wide.
Bedroom
If you’re hanging a pendant above a nightstand, allow for at least 30″ between the bottom of the shade and your nightstand’s surface. To keep the look balanced, center your pendant over your nightstand.
Size chart
| Size |
| area XS |
| Room XS |
| Size | DIA 2"-6" | DIA 6"-12" | DIA 12"-18" | DIA 20"-24" | DIA 24"-32" | DIA 32"-40" |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| area | 32-54 FT | 54-107 FT | 107-161 FT | 161-215 FT | 215-269 FT | 269-378 FT |
| Room | BATHROOM/AISLE | DINING ROOM | KITCHEN | BEDROOM | LIVING ROOM | COMMERCIAL INTERIOR |
* Sizes are American and expressed in inches.


















