Sola Hammered Copper Pendant Lamp
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Description
Description
There is something elemental about the Sola. It begins as a flat sheet of raw copper — warm, bright, and completely ordinary. Then the hammering starts. Hundreds of individual strikes, placed by hand across the entire surface, each one slightly different in depth and angle, slowly coaxing the flat sheet into a wide shallow dome. No two blows land the same way twice. By the time the shaping is done, the copper holds the memory of every strike — a surface that catches light the way no machine-pressed shade ever could.
Once the form is set, the fire patina process begins. Heat is applied directly to the copper, and the metal responds — shifting through orange, red, deep brown, and finally settling into that near-black tone you see on the Sola's exterior. The craftsman controls the depth of the patina by managing temperature and timing, working across the surface until the darkening is even but never uniform. Where the hammer peaks sit highest, the patina burns lightest — and those warm copper highlights remain, visible through the darkness like embers. The interior is left in its natural state: raw copper, warm and glowing, throwing soft amber light downward into the room below.
The result is a pendant that works as a piece of craft first and a light fixture second. Hung over a kitchen island, a dining table, or an entryway, the Sola commands the ceiling with its scale and silence — wide, low, and completely still.
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.



