As a home and interiors, it is nothing more unsightly than the overcrowding of the cables that ruin the general aesthetics.
And while I do my best to hide the disorder in my house, my biggest challenge was to hide cords from my stylish lighting.
When I stumbled on the idea of cordless table lamps five years ago, they (theoretically) made the perfect solution for a straight room. They were not only practical to place inside and outside, they also solved my output of exposed cables or with limited power supply points.
In addition, they are easy to charge and use them with minimal excitement – and an immediate path to add styles or even to use as the best desk lamp if you concentrate on a task.
But after I had gone through my appropriate proportion of cordless lamps (for every room in my house), there was a criticism that always let me down.
My biggest criticism about cordless lamps
My biggest criticism of cordless lamps has always been the battery life.
While most wireless lamps are between 10 and 24 hours of use, I could never find a lamp that would take a few more days before I faded the light and needed charging. I also never wanted to return to corded lamps.
Until I discovered the Monte Carlo-Premium cabin lamp, which promised a battery life of up to 140 hours. Admittedly, I was skeptical in this claim (after all, you don't all promise a long battery life?), But I was interested in putting it on and finding out.
The Lutris Monte Carlo lamp
The Monte Carlo lamp from Lutris sees as high as your name-think you on the palm trees along the coast of Monaco and French Riviera hits the luxury hotel style.
But I was more interested in the brushed golden color, the weighty design and the unusual charging cock (all in a cotton dust and a gift packaging) whether this could do the work.
After I was switched on, I was impressed by its brightness and at 200 lumens it was as powerful as my cut lamp. The Monte Carlo lamp also has a dimmable option by touching the top of the lamp a few times.
I couldn't wait to place it in my living room and it was good to shed light on a fairly boring corner on my bookshelf.
I made it to be the goal of turning on it every day at the same time and letting it switch on for about four hours (with maximum brightness).
As a rule, the lighting would quickly fade on the fifth day, but even after the seventh day she had retained the brightness.
And on the 12th day, when I expected it to be reduced considerably, I was surprised to see that the strength was still as bright as with a full task. Impressive!
I also liked the fact that I was still able to place it or spice up my garden in the evening (it is IP65 water and dust -resistant for external use).
I finally found a lamp that had solved my biggest criticism about wireless lamps so far.
However, it is quite expensive (less than $ 200) compared to other affordable rechargeable lamps on the market.
However, if you have recharged and charge lamps and want a striking high-end style, I would say that the Monte Carlo lamp is a worthwhile investment.
Where to buy?
The Monte-Carlo Cordless Lampe can buy in the USA for $ 99 and £ 149 (UK) on Lutris.com.