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Vintage Miller Utility Sunlite (therapy light)

$6,495.64 MXN
$6,561.26 More info
Los buques de United States Us

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There is only 1 left in stock.

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Política de oferta

OBO - El vendedor acepta ofertas en este artículo. Detalles

La política de devoluciones

None: All purchases final

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PayPal accepted
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Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted

Las opciones de envío

No hay precio de envío se especifica en MX
Los buques de United States Us

Política de oferta

OBO - El vendedor acepta ofertas en este artículo. Detalles

La política de devoluciones

None: All purchases final

Protección de compra

Opciones de pago

PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted

Rasgos del artículo

Categoría:

Lamps

cantidad disponible:

Sólo uno en stock, para muy pronto

Condition:

Used

Detalles del anuncio

Las políticas del vendedor:

Ver las políticas del vendedor

Envío de descuento:

Pesos de envío de todos los elementos se suman para el ahorro.

Publicado en venta:

Más de una semana

Artículo número:

552085660

Descripción del Artículo

Vintage Miller Utility Sunlite (therapy light) Untouched, un-restored, everything original In 1932 GE's Lighting Headquarters at NELA Park unveiled a most unusual light source to the world. It was the S-1 Sunlight lamp, conceived by Matthew Luckiesh to deliver a light output closely resembling that of the sun. His goal was to develop a light source with the same mild ultraviolet content as natural sunlight, in the belief that irradiating people with this light would give them vitality and maintain health. Judging from the spectacular sales of the lamp, the public seemed to believe this marketing as well! The GE Mazda type S-2 sunlamp was marketed during the 1930s as a “distinctly artificial sunlight source for ultraviolet health radiation”. This lamp was the smaller domestic offshoot of the larger Mazda type S-1 sunlamp. Early lamps were made of clear hard glass while later examples were inside frosted. Clear envelopes were only made for a short period of time, perhaps for one year, and today clear S-2 lamps are quite scarce and collectible. S-2 lamps have also been spotted with the filament “pointing” towards the base of the lamp and anchored to the stem