Got this off eBay, but it took the lady about 3 weeks to ship it. It was really cloudy when I first got it, but it's cleared up some after two runs. The base is not the typical gold, it's more of a muted copper or something. The base also has two pieces that come apart and there's a cone inside the base. Any additional info anyone might have on this lamp would be appreciated. Model 104 on box - blue/yellow (how did it end up green?). Also, very little wax in this globe.
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Albums: 60s Lamps
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Jordan, the two part Century base was only used from about 1965 to 1968. It did come with the plastic base.
Can you post photos and info on the 2nd? What's the matter with it, and is it, too, a 104?
Put a standard 40w in this. Same bulb you'd put in any other Century. 60s squiggle Aristocrats, squiggle Decorator Aristocrats and the very early gold Aristocrats are the only 52oz. lamps that don't take a 40w appliance bulb, they take a 30w R20 reflector bulb. And I suggest - just once, for the fun of it - running it for about a half a day and marveling at the fact that it didn't overheat after eight or nine hours. This thing SHOULD have almost Mathmos-like flow, what's usually called "serpentine" flow - long twisty snakes and really neat shapes, far more mesmerizing than any new lamp.
I highly recommend putting this in its own spot, away from sunlight, drafts or heat registers, and running it as a focus lamp. Watch it to relax before bed. Put it on a side table when guests come over. This lamp should display the kind of action that made Lava Lite famous, and it's an (I think gorgeous) rare color, a lamp many of us would love to find - I know I would! I have one of these copper two-part bases, but mine was found without a globe.
Jonas, again, thank you for all the information about this lamp. Where would we be without your knowledge? The inner part of the base is cylindrical. I'll get more pics up of this lamp soon. I am so delighted to have it and even more excited now that it's cleared up. I do have one question though. This lamp came with a 50W flood in it, which I promptly took out. I put a 30W in. The lava does its initial spike (but doesn't reach the top since there's not enough lava!), but then it liquefies, but never really rises. If it does anything at all, it just sends up a lava "thumb" and never does much else. Thoughts?
And this is a third lamp. This is not the one that I had inquired about a month or so ago. That one is still sitting in the basement, all goofed up.
Excuse me - I didn't see it was yours, Erin! I assumed this was a third that had turned up!
Looks great. Gonna use this photo as my representative glamour shot of this model/color.
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