
The design and manufacture of the trout chandelier followed the principles of a timeless work of art. The chandelier is a complex piece weighing 60 kg when completed and consists of different materials such as weathered bronze, quartz, crystals, and ornate turning.
The piece consists of 3 main spheres, a large polished bronze sphere discovered in a bronze and pearl netting with two hand carved rock crystals spheres, the smaller of the 2 being clear.
The chandelier is connected to the roof of the pagoda via a bronze narwhale tusk. The top sphere, which is covered with the pearl net, links to a bronze turning that extends out as the arms of the chandelier and drops down to the 2nd slightly smaller sphere - a hollow rock crystal with an articulated bronze fish inside it.
The three trout extending from the central column were hand carved and then cast in bronze. The arms of the chandelier, extending from the mouths of the trout were hand carved with a fish scale effect. Rutalite quartz drops decorate the arms of the chandelier.
A high quality inclusion-less solid rock crystal ball and a carved wooden frog, mounted in a bronze frame, can be found below the third sphere. A pearl within a pearl makes up the bottom of the chandelier.



