Bisque porcelain, suspended in descent.
Stream does not announce itself. It arrives the way light does at dusk — gradually, warmly, with a quiet authority that reshapes everything around it. Conceived by Stefanie Hering, each shade is hand-formed in bisque porcelain, a material that does not merely carry light but holds it, transforms it, releases it as something altogether softer than its source.
A single shade. A cascading column. A constellation of forms falling through a stairwell or gallery. Every configuration is composed to order, every finish selected from a palette refined over decades of porcelain mastery.
This is not a lighting fixture. It is a decision about how a room feels.
Swipe through the collection.
Light, held in form.
A quiet dialogue between ceramic and glass, precision and fluidity—this collaboration with Stefanie Hering reveals lighting as both object and atmosphere.
From subtle wall accents to glowing suspended silhouettes, each piece brings a sense of calm, warmth, and balance to the spaces it inhabits.
Refined. Intentional. Enduring.
Lighting is the defining object in a space—the element that turns a room into something cinematic, atmospheric, and immersive.
Vesta anchors the room with shallow, inverted forms that disperse indirect light upward, creating a softer ambient glow across ceilings, wood paneling, and architectural detail. Its Dim-to-Warm LED technology allows the atmosphere to shift throughout the day, moving from functional clarity to a warmer, more relaxed residential tone.
Prismatic adds a more intimate layer. Somewhat recessed within its Mid-Century metal shade, a secondary pressed-glass shade casts an iridescent light while the concealed LED source reduces glare. On the table lamp, a 3-step touch dimmer gives the space another level of control, balancing ambient mood with functional illumination.
Together, Vesta and Prismatic show how lighting can define a room at every level—from the architecture overhead to the surfaces we live beside.
At LUXE’s Living by Design Showhouse, Pulp Design Studios created a guest suite defined by contrast, precision, and atmosphere.
Lighting wasn’t added at the end—it was specified from the start, shaping how the space is experienced. From sculptural statements by Studio M to the architectural clarity of ET2 and the ambient balance of Maxim Lighting, each piece was selected with intent, building a layered hierarchy of light that works in concert, not competition.
“Studio M Lighting helped us bring atmosphere and personality to our space… lighting is what truly brings a room to life.” — Pulp Design Studios
Explore the full space through the Living by Design Showhouse.
In New York City, we gathered at FREVO to celebrate the launch of Stefanie Hering’s new collection with Studio M—an evening shaped by materiality, craft, and quiet luxury.
Set within one of the city’s most intimate Michelin-starred destinations, the event brought together design, atmosphere, and conversation in a way that felt deeply aligned with the collection itself: refined, thoughtful, and made to be experienced.
A beautiful night marking the beginning of a collection defined by artistry, restraint, and the transformative power of light.
Burgeon by Stefanie Hering x Studio M.
A sculptural expression of porcelain, Burgeon evokes the quiet beauty of a flower bud just before bloom—restrained, intimate, and full of presence. Light moves through each form with softness and precision, revealing porcelain not simply as a material, but as atmosphere: refined, luminous, and deeply felt.
Designed with a reverence for craft and a sensitivity to form, Burgeon brings warmth, stillness, and a rare sense of composure to the room. It is a piece that does not compete for attention, but holds it completely.
Raydance — light in motion.
Hand-shaped from crystal glass using traditional techniques, each form is blown into substantial wooden molds carved from beech trees over 150 years old. The process leaves a subtle imprint—an integrity of material and time captured within the glass.
Light is not contained. It’s softened, refracted, and brought to life.
Studio M × Stefanie Hering.
There’s a growing rarity in stillness.
In a world that rewards velocity, luxury has shifted—away from excess, toward restraint. Away from noise, toward presence.
The Stefanie Hering collection for Studio M is rooted in that philosophy. It doesn’t seek attention. It holds it, quietly.
Crafted from hand-formed porcelain, each piece carries the intimacy of material shaped with intention. Not simply inspired by nature—but paced by it. Measured. Organic. Considered.
Stream moves with quiet continuity.
Burgeon captures the moment before bloom.
Raydance refracts light like water in motion.
Tropo unfolds in soft, organic volumes—suspended, yet grounded.
This is lighting that doesn’t compete with a space—it refines it. Porcelain softens light into something warmer, more atmospheric. Less electrical. More elemental.
Here, quiet becomes a statement.
Not of absence, but of intention.
Not of simplicity, but of control.
A different kind of luxury—one that cannot be rushed.
For Stefanie Hering, every design begins with a line. A quiet movement of pencil across paper. A study of proportion, balance, and restraint. In collaboration with Studio M, that line leaves the page—emerging in porcelain forms that transform a drawing into sculptural illumination.
What begins as a sketch evolves through material—where porcelain carries the gesture of the original line into physical space. Seen here in the earliest moments of the process, the drawing becomes form, and form becomes atmosphere.
Step into the world where a line becomes illumination.