Doma Hammered Copper Pendant Lamp
14 in stock
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Description
Description
The Doma is the most openly handmade pendant in the Hevna range. There is no patina obscuring the surface, no verdigris softening the texture, no brushing smoothing away the marks — just copper in its warmest, most immediate state, and the full evidence of every hammer blow that shaped it. The dome is formed by hand over a rounded form, the craftsman working in concentric circles from the crown down, each strike slightly overlapping the last, building the curve strike by strike until the hemisphere is complete. The facets left behind are large and irregular — not the fine, even dimpling of a machine-textured surface, but the kind of varied, energetic mark that only a hand tool leaves.
Once the form is set, the surface receives only a light patina treatment — the gentlest intervention in the Hevna finishing process. Just enough to deepen the copper slightly in the valleys of the hammer marks, creating a subtle contrast between the high points, which stay bright and warm, and the low points, which settle into a slightly darker tone. The result is a surface that reads like burnished copper in direct light — almost glowing — and like something older and more complex in shadow.
The knurled socket collar at the crown is a small detail worth noticing: machined with a grip pattern that references industrial hardware, it sits in deliberate contrast to the handmade dome below. The Doma is that kind of lamp — every detail considered, nothing accidental.
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.



