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Maurice Berger introduced his lamps in Paris in
1898 to purify and refresh closed spaces such as hospitals. Word
quickly spread that the lamps were also a delight in the home,
and fashionable Parisians began asking for and suggesting more
pleasing designs. Lampe
Berger has since become as famous for
the beauty of its lamps as their usefulness.
Lampe Berger fragrance
lamps do not simply cover
up unpleasant odors they actually eliminate the source by destroying
bacteria in the air. It's all in the way Lampe
Berger's beautiful,
hand-crafted French fragrance lamps work. Air is continually
drawn into the lamp's oil-heated chamber, cleansed, and released.
The flame is brief, lasting just long enough to heat the scented
oil, which produces both the energy that circulates the air and
a pleasant fragrance that lasts for hours. |