Inhabitat











October 10, 2007

Stuart Haygarth’s Recycled Lighting Design

by Ariana Mouyiaris

Stuart Haygarth, Millenium Chandelier, Camron PR Press Photo, Stuart Haygarth, Spectacle (Chandelier), Ariana Mouyiaris, recycled design, reclaimed design, recycled materials, reused materials

Stuart Haygarth’s talent lies in re-imagining waste into striking lighting design. As a London based designer, his work falls into an increasingly present design movement that is part salvage, part make-do-and-mend, and 100% stunning. This approach to more sustainable product ranges seems to be a recipe for success, as both the Deptford Design Market Challenge and Trash Luxe at London’s recent Design Festival centered around recycled materials. Stuart’s fixtures have long been an Inhabitat favorite, including his Disposable wine glass chandelier and his beach-waste Tide chandelier.


Stuart Haygarth, Millenium Chandelier (Colour) Unlit, Stuart Haygarth Website Photography, Stuart Haygarth, Spectacle (Chandelier), Ariana Mouyiaris, recycled design, reclaimed design, recycled materials, reused materials

His Millenium Chandelier, shown above, is made from an assortment of exploded Party Poppers and debris collected from London’s millennial celebrations. Originally created as a ‘one-off’ piece, subsequent editions have followed including one exclusively constructed from black poppers.

Turning various forms of flotsam into fashioned design piece is nothing new, as we’ve seen with his Tide Chandelier. Although trained in graphic design and photography, Haygarth’s fresh approach to found objects: meticulously collecting, categorizing and crafting new meaning through design, makes his sculptural practice a green benchmark in product innovation. This idea of celebrating the ordinary, reusing forgotten objects instead of manufacturing new materials and generating new waste, is a trend we hope to see more of.

+ Stuart Haygarth

Stuart Haygarth, Millenium Chandelier Lit, Stuart Haygarth Website Photography, Stuart Haygarth, Spectacle (Chandelier), Ariana Mouyiaris, recycled design, reclaimed design, recycled materials, reused materials

Stuart Haygarth, Diposable Chandelier, Recycled Material Lighting Designs, Foudn Object Lighting Designs, Wine glass chandelier, green lighting, green chandelier, Stuart Haygarth, Spectacle (Chandelier), Ariana Mouyiaris, recycled design, reclaimed design, recycled materials, reused materials

Stuart Haygarth, Spectacle (Chandelier), Ariana Mouyiaris, Stuart Haygarth, Spectacle (Chandelier), Ariana Mouyiaris, recycled design, reclaimed design, recycled materials, reused materials

5 Responses to “Stuart Haygarth’s Recycled Lighting Design”

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[…] latest in a long line of dramatic, ah-why-didn’t-I-think-of that, lighting designs using recycled materials, his […]

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[…] Stuart Haygarth’s Recycled Lighting Design Published October 10th, 2007 Furniture / Lighting Design So pretty.  The question i have is how long do it take him to find all the same parts.  More at inhabitat.com […]

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[…] Inhabitat: Stuart Haygarth’s Recycled Lighting Design by Ariana “Stuart Haygarth’s talent lies in re-imagining waste into striking lighting design. As a London based designer, his work falls into an increasingly present d… […]

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Kat Says:
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The tide chandelier and all the other lights are very impressive. I appreciate the time spent in collecting as I’ve found myself up to my elbows in macaroni salad and ketchup trying to collect cans to recycle at large army picnics. Keep up the clooction process and putting those items to good use.

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Kat Says:
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inspirational! garbage so very chic.

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