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The Sienna Bird Collection has always carried a clear idea.

A bird resting on a branch. A light structure suspended above the room. A chandelier that feels natural, decorative, and a little unexpected.

That original idea is still here.

What has changed is the material language.

With the new Sienna Bird Alabaster Chandelier and Sienna Bird Round Alabaster Chandelier, the familiar silhouette is reworked through a softer, more mineral material. The design remains recognizable, but the atmosphere changes. The birds are still there. The branch-like structure is still there. The sense of balance is still there.

But the light no longer behaves in the same way.

What Has Not Changed

The alabaster version is not a redesign from zero.

It keeps the core identity of the Sienna Bird series: the bird detail, the branch-inspired composition, and the sculptural relationship between the frame and the light source. The design still feels architectural, but not rigid. It still brings a natural motif into the room without becoming overly rustic or decorative.

That continuity matters.

The original Sienna Bird Pendant Lamp and Sienna Bird Round Chandelier became appealing because they turned a familiar chandelier structure into something more poetic. The bird detail gave the fixture movement. The branch form softened the geometry. The result felt less like a standard chandelier and more like a small scene suspended in the air.

The alabaster version keeps that scene intact.

What changes is not the idea. It is the feeling of the light.

Acrylic vs Alabaster: A Different Material Logic

The original Sienna Bird design has a cleaner, more controlled glow.

Acrylic gives the light a modern clarity. It diffuses evenly, keeps the fixture visually sharp, and supports a brighter, more direct impression. The result feels crisp and clean, especially in spaces that need a light fixture with definition and a slightly playful natural detail.

Alabaster works differently.

It is not just a white shade. It is a natural translucent stone with soft internal texture, subtle veining, and an uneven mineral depth. When light passes through it, the glow does not feel perfectly uniform. It feels layered.

That is the main shift.

The acrylic version gives the design clarity and precision. The alabaster version gives it warmth, depth, and a quieter emotional tone.

How the Light Behavior Changes

The biggest difference is not only what the material looks like.

It is how the light moves through it.

With acrylic, the light feels clean and controlled. It stays close to the surface and creates an even brightness. That makes the original Sienna Bird feel light, crisp, and visually clear.

With alabaster, the light enters the material.

The stone catches the glow from within. Its natural veining and cloud-like texture soften the brightness before it reaches the room. Instead of looking like light placed behind a shade, the alabaster version feels as if the material itself is holding the light.

This changes the mood of the fixture.

The glow becomes more volumetric. The light feels warmer and slower. The chandelier no longer reads only as a decorative object overhead. It becomes part of the atmosphere of the room.

The Bird Chandelier: From Motion to Stillness

In the linear Sienna Bird design, the original version emphasizes movement.

The bird details and branch-like form make the fixture feel animated, as if the birds have just landed. It works well above a dining table or kitchen island because the long structure brings rhythm and direction to the space.

In the alabaster version, that same linear structure feels calmer.

The birds still create a natural story, but the alabaster discs add a sense of stillness. The fixture becomes less about visual motion and more about sculptural balance. The soft stone glow gives the design a more mature presence, making it feel especially suited to dining rooms and warm modern interiors.

It is the same branch, but the mood is quieter.

The Round Chandelier: From Geometry to Halo

The round Sienna Bird design has a different kind of strength.

The circular frame naturally creates symmetry and focus. In the original version, the round shape feels structured and decorative, with the bird details bringing life to the geometry.

In the alabaster version, the circle becomes softer.

The natural stone diffusers create a more continuous glow around the frame, almost like a halo effect. The chandelier still has structure, but the light feels less segmented and more atmospheric.

That makes the round alabaster version especially useful in spaces where the chandelier needs to anchor the room without feeling too sharp: an entryway, dining nook, or living room center.

How It Changes a Room

The alabaster version changes the way the Sienna Bird Collection sits in a home.

In a dining room, the softer glow makes the table feel more relaxed and intimate. The chandelier still has a clear design presence, but it does not feel loud.

In an entryway, the stone light creates a calmer first impression. Instead of greeting the room with shine or sparkle, it gives the space a warmer, more grounded tone.

In a bedroom, the alabaster material reduces visual noise. The bird motif remains decorative, but the creamy stone glow keeps the fixture from feeling too playful.

This is the real value of the material change.

The chandelier becomes less decorative and more atmospheric.

Why This Material Matters Now

Interiors have been moving toward warmer, quieter materials.

Less glare. Less hard shine. More texture. More natural surfaces. More light that feels diffused rather than exposed.

That is why alabaster feels right for the next version of Sienna Bird.

It supports the same nature-inspired idea, but in a more refined way. The bird motif still brings softness and storytelling, while the stone brings weight, calm, and longevity. Together, they create a fixture that feels more aligned with warm minimalism, quiet luxury, organic modern interiors, and homes that want lighting to shape the mood rather than simply decorate the ceiling.

The shift is subtle, but important.

Lighting is becoming less about the object alone and more about the atmosphere it creates.

Two Versions, Two Intentions

The original Sienna Bird Collection and the new alabaster version are not competing with each other.

They serve different interiors.

The acrylic version feels clearer, lighter, and more precise. It works beautifully when the room needs a clean modern glow with a touch of natural movement.

The alabaster version feels deeper, warmer, and more emotional. It is better for spaces that want a softer presence, a natural stone glow, and a more mature interpretation of the same bird-inspired design.

The silhouette remains familiar.

The intention changes.

The form stays the same. The feeling does not.

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