Marble and stainless steel
1,35 kg
Blox is a sculptural candleholder designed by Berlin-based designer Ilja Huber. Available in two variants – one in mixed marbles and one combining marble and travertine – it features cylindrical stone blocks that can be rotated around a steel axis, allowing you to create your own balanced composition. Solid, functional, and striking with or without a candle.
Clean with a damp cloth. Use a PH-neutral cleaning product. Please be aware that sharp objects can leave marks.
Blox
At first glance, Blox appears simple. Composed of three cylindrical blocks of stone, its geometry feels familiar yet subtly unexpected. Counterbalanced around a steel axis, each block can be rotated — allowing the cylinders to shift and rebalance in relation to one another. The result is a frozen moment of equilibrium that gives the piece its distinctive sculptural presence. Interactive by nature, Blox invites the user to determine the final composition, adjusting the juxtaposition of the blocks to match personal preference. Even without a candle, it stands confidently as an object in its own right.
Crafted from a mixture of marbles and travertine and available in two carefully curated stone combinations, Blox allows the beauty of the material to speak for itself. The depth and natural variation of the stone create visual richness, while its weight promises stability and durability.
Ilja Huber
Ilja Huber is a German designer whose work bridges technical precision with sculptural expression. Originally trained as a toolmaker in metalworking, he developed an early understanding of industrial processes and material behavior before studying design at the University of Fine Arts in Hamburg, where hands-on experimentation met a strong foundation in design history and theory.
This combination of craft, technical skill and conceptual thinking defines his approach. For Ilja, design is not about decoration, but about clarity — approaching a topic as efficiently, honestly, and problem-focused as possible. He is drawn to everyday objects and well-resolved technical solutions, seeking harmony while often introducing a subtle, unexpected twist.
Experimentation is central to his process. Projects befin with research into material or production methods and evolve through iterative prototyping, where idea, development, and production must align. “The design process only works when idea, development, and production are aligned,” he notes.
Honest. Experimental. Functional. These principles define Huber’s work — clearly embodied in his design for Normann Copenhagen, the Blox Candleholder.







