Nox Antique Hammered Copper Pendant Lamp
13 in stock
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Description
Description
The Nox is the darkest pendant in the Hevna range. It begins as all the copper pieces do — a flat sheet, a hammer, a craftsman working the metal into form strike by strike. The bell shape is built slowly, the curve deepening from the crown outward until the dome holds its tall, upright silhouette without support. The hammering on the Nox is deliberate: large, round-faced strikes that leave deep, clearly defined facets across the entire surface — visible in raking light, felt if you run a hand across the dome.
Then the dark patina is applied, and this is where the Nox separates itself from everything else on the Hevna range. The oxidation process is pushed further than on any other finish — the copper is driven through amber, through brown, and into a deep near-black that settles across the entire surface. Only the very highest points of each hammer facet resist the darkening, where the metal is too polished and too exposed for the patina to grip. Those peaks stay warm — a deep amber-brown that reads as copper even against the surrounding darkness. The result is a surface that appears almost black in low light, and reveals itself as rich hammered copper only when the light catches it directly.
The Nox suits spaces that understand restraint. Dark walls, natural materials, rooms lit low. It does not announce itself — it waits to be noticed, and rewards the noticing.
Delivery & Return
Delivery & Return
Shipping
Processed in 2-4 business days.
Free express shipping via DHL or FedEx.
USA: 3–5 days
UK & Europe: 3–7 days
Rest of world: up to 14 days
Delivered Duty Paid (DDP) - no extra charges at delivery.
Tracking number sent by email once shipped.
Returns
60 days from delivery.
Unused, uninstalled, original packaging.
Email support@hevna.com with your order number.
Damaged item?
Email us with photos. Replacement or full refund, you choose.
The Story We Almost Didn’t Tell.
We almost let the work speak for itself.
But the hands, the heat, and the hard choices behind it? That’s a story worth telling.



