A frame that makes objects sing
Embrace isn’t just a fixture; it’s a framing device. Soroush Doustvandi designed Embrace to surround and celebrate objects — artworks, fashion, displays — making each piece read as a moment. At its core the product asks a simple question: how do you make light behave like a gallery frame rather than a flood? The answer is sculptural restraint, optical precision and an interface that lets curators tune mood without losing focus.
Product snapshot — what Embrace is
Embrace is a sculptural event and display luminaire produced by Rasalight. It combines a refined metal frame with engineered optics and a central smart hub for color-temperature and brightness control. The form wraps the subject, creating a soft, directional pool and a subtle halo that isolates the object from its surroundings. Embrace ships in curated finishes and a palette of “exquisite” colors so it reads as object and instrument at once.

Why the idea matters — light as a curator
In galleries, boutiques and exhibition spaces, illumination does more than make things visible — it composes. Embrace treats light as compositional language: a way to lead the eye, reveal texture, and conserve the atmosphere around an object. Its value is practical (precise photometry, low glare) and poetic (a visible frame that honors what it surrounds). For clients who mount rotating shows or merch displays, Embrace reduces the friction of re-lighting by giving them a stable, tunable frame.
Designer mindset — restraint, framing, and service
Doustvandi’s attitude toward Embrace is disciplined. He starts from editorial questions — what should the viewer notice first? — and translates them into optical rules: narrow beam spread where detail matters, soft falloff to preserve context, and minimal stray light to avoid wash. The intention is to design not for maximal spectacle but for selective reverence. Embrace’s visible frame is deliberately quiet: it signals intent without shouting.

Concept development — framing as structure
The conceptual leap for Embrace was literalizing the idea of a frame: a physical ring that sits around the object while optics within focus light inward. Designers explored different ring geometries, suspension systems and mounting methods so the product could adapt to pedestals, plinths, showcases and ceiling rigs. The frame is both a visual cue and a functional housing — carrying optics, drivers and the smart hub while remaining visually minimal.
Optics & light engineering — how Embrace sculpts form
Embrace achieves its “framing” by combining precision optics and controlled diffusion:
Narrow, multi-element lenses create a crisp illumination cone for fine detail.
Secondary diffusers produce a soft halo to gently separate object from background.
Internal baffles, micro-louvers and anti-reflective finishes minimize stray light and flare.
Tunable LED modules enable fine color control (warm → neutral → cool) without shifting spectral quality; the result is reliable material rendering across textiles, pigments and metals.
These optical moves are engineered so curators can dial in mood without losing fidelity.

Material, finishes and craft — object quality for object lighting
The frame and housing are resolved in premium materials to match the spaces Embrace inhabits: anodized aluminum, hand-finished powders, and plated accents for luxury installations. The finishes are chosen to minimize visible reflections while harmonizing with exhibited works. Internally, components are serviceable: modular LED boards, replaceable diffusers, and accessible drivers make long-term maintenance straightforward — a must for museum-grade specification.
Interaction & the smart hub — simple control, precise result
A central design requirement was an interface that balances precision with simplicity. The smart hub provides local controls and networked capability: preset scenes, incremental CCT steps, and grouped controls for systems of Embrace frames. The UX is intentionally shallow — a curator should be able to match light across several frames in seconds — but with fine-grain options available for conservators or lighting designers who want photometric exactitude.

Prototyping & user testing — validating light, not just looks
Early prototypes focused on measuring what matters: Illuminance maps, glare indices, spectral render metrics and how the frame alters perceived contrast. Mockups were tested with real museum objects and retail merchandise under controlled conditions to observe color fidelity, texture reveal and crowd sightlines. Rapid iteration refined diffuser thickness, lens placement and frame-to-object clearance to balance intimacy and viewing comfort.
Manufacturing & serviceability — design for real life
Embrace is designed for production and life-cycle management. Key manufacturing choices include modular assemblies for optics, standard driver footprints to ease replacements, and mechanical interfaces that enable retrofitting into existing rigs. The frame uses common machining and finishing processes so it can be produced with consistent tolerances; yet its design allows for custom finishes and bespoke sizes for flagship projects.

Sustainability & longevity — a specification mindset
Rather than disposable novelty, Embrace emphasizes durability and repairability. Replaceable LED modules, standardized drivers, and serviceable diffusers reduce waste. The product’s material choices favor long service life and recyclability where possible. Also, its ability to precisely control light reduces energy use in exhibition settings: fewer lamps required, dimming schedules that match opening hours, and grouped controls that avoid unnecessary illumination.
Applications & use cases — where Embrace excels
Embrace fits into several high-value contexts:
Museums and galleries — accenting artifacts, paintings, sculptures.
Luxury boutiques and showrooms — framing merchandise and seasonal displays.
Events and installations — creating curated vignettes and product reveal moments.
Private collections and architectural interiors — where object-focused mood matters.
In all these contexts, Embrace acts as both tool and object: technical enough for lighting designers, refined enough for design directors.
Awards & industry recognition — why juries respond
Embrace has been recognized for combining aesthetic clarity with engineering depth: a sculptural language that is also spec-grade. Industry juries typically reward solutions that demonstrate measurable improvements (better CRI, lower glare, improved viewer comfort) together with thoughtful presentation and market readiness — precisely what Embrace delivers.
Lessons for designers — takeaways from Embrace
Treat illumination as editorial — decide what to highlight and what to let recede.
Combine visible form with invisible performance — the frame must be beautiful and the light must measure.
Prototype with real objects — nothing substitutes testing with the actual materials you’ll light.
Design for service — replaceability extends life and reduces waste.
Make control simple — busy curators need fast repeatable results, not complex menus.



