#Loewe Television Adelaide
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
bybespoke · 3 months ago
Text
Loewe Televisions in Adelaide
Discover Exceptional Viewing with Loewe Televisions in Adelaide
In a city where style and sophistication are highly prized, Loewe televisions stand out as a symbol of luxury and cutting-edge technology. For Adelaide residents seeking to elevate their home entertainment experience, Loewe offers an array of premium options, including the renowned Loewe Ultra HD television Adelaide. With its focus on unparalleled quality and bespoke design, Loewe is redefining what it means to enjoy television at home.
Loewe Television: A Blend of Elegance and Innovation
Loewe has long been synonymous with high-end home entertainment solutions, and their televisions are a testament to this legacy. The Loewe Television range combines sleek, modern design with advanced technology, making them a perfect addition to any stylish Adelaide home.
One of the standout features of Loewe televisions is their commitment to delivering an exceptional visual experience. Each model is engineered with meticulous attention to detail, ensuring that viewers enjoy stunning picture clarity and vibrant colors. Whether you're watching the latest blockbuster or your favorite TV show, Loewe televisions bring every scene to life with remarkable precision.
The Ultra HD Revolution: Loewe Ultra HD Television in Adelaide
For those seeking the pinnacle of visual excellence, the Loewe Ultra HD television range offers a transformative viewing experience. Ultra HD, or 4K, technology is designed to provide four times the resolution of standard Full HD, delivering an unparalleled level of detail and sharpness. In Adelaide, where home entertainment spaces are becoming increasingly sophisticated, Loewe Ultra HD televisions are the ideal choice for those who demand nothing but the best.
Loewe’s Ultra HD models incorporate state-of-the-art features such as HDR (High Dynamic Range) and advanced color processing. HDR enhances the contrast between light and dark areas of the image, allowing for a greater range of colors and a more immersive viewing experience. This technology ensures that every scene is rendered with breathtaking realism, making Loewe Ultra HD televisions a popular choice for cinephiles and sports enthusiasts alike.
Bespoke Solutions: Loewe Television "By Bespoke"
Loewe’s commitment to personalization and exclusivity is evident in their "By Bespoke" service. This option allows Adelaide customers to tailor their television to their specific needs and preferences, ensuring a perfect fit for any living space. From custom finishes to unique stand options, Loewe’s bespoke solutions ensure that your television is not only a technological marvel but also a beautiful piece of furniture that complements your home’s aesthetic.
The "By Bespoke" service also extends to the integration of Loewe televisions with other home automation systems. Whether you’re looking to create a seamless smart home experience or simply wish to incorporate your television into an existing setup, Loewe’s expert team can provide guidance and support to achieve your vision.
Why Choose Loewe in Adelaide?
Choosing a Loewe television means investing in quality and style. In a city known for its vibrant culture and refined tastes, Loewe stands out as the brand that meets the highest standards of design and performance. Adelaide’s discerning homeowners will appreciate the craftsmanship and attention to detail that goes into every Loewe product.
Moreover, Loewe’s local presence in Adelaide ensures that customers receive exceptional service and support. Whether you’re interested in a Loewe Ultra HD television or exploring bespoke options, you can rely on personalized assistance to guide you through the selection process and ensure that your television meets your exact requirements.
Elevate Your Home Entertainment with Loewe
In summary, Loewe televisions offer a unique blend of elegance, technology, and customization that sets them apart from the competition. For Adelaide residents seeking to enhance their home entertainment experience, Loewe’s range of ultra high-definition models and bespoke services represent the ultimate in luxury and performance. With Loewe, you’re not just buying a television; you’re investing in a premium viewing experience that transforms your living space into a hub of sophisticated entertainment. Experience the future of home entertainment with Loewe Television Adelaide, and discover how their exceptional televisions can redefine the way you watch, enjoy, and live.
0 notes
Text
The Big Bang Theory
It is a design philosophy that has transitioned through more than nine decades of trading, numerous global economic meltdowns, a world war and countless technology revolutions.
Yet Danish brand Bang & Olufsen’s (B&O) focus on products that transmit sound authentically – the way the artist intended it to be heard – and opulent, sculpture-like finishes has never held it in better stead.
From humble beginnings in 1925, today B&O is one of the world’s most prominent home entertainment manufacturers with its heavyweight portfolio of quality televisions, music systems and high-performance loudspeakers, telephones, and multimedia products now sold across an extensive, independent retail network of 700 stores in more than 100 countries worldwide.
Clearly striking a chord with both audiophiles and those who appreciate clean design, superior technology and fine craftsmanship, it boasts its own wing in the Struer Museum, records annual group revenues of around A$496 million and has a cult-like following where a number of fan sites have sprung up dedicated to dissecting the company’s every move – whether real or imagined.
    Not forgetting, of course, its enviable research, development and test facilities highly sought after by the automotive industry by brands such as BMW, Audi and Mercedes-Benz, as well as the oft-repeated rumour that the revolutionary Apple iPod design was inspired by B&O’s BeoCom 6000 – a wireless telephone that contained a wheel to scroll.
The group currently operates 22 eponymous stores across the Asia Pacific region with a presence across Adelaide, Perth, Brisbane, Sydney and Auckland. The brand’s Australasian arm is led by general manager Julian Kipping who boasts a 20-year history with the brand, initially as a franchisee in his native UK before being approached to head up the ANZ market in 2006.
In his time occupying the big chair, Kipping has led the group through an enormous period of change that aside from new store openings and new inventory has also witnessed the Australasian operations acquired by privately owned conglomerate Emerald Group Investments (EGI) just two years ago.
Led by former bank analyst James Kennedy with former Prada Australian manager Melinda O’Rourke as chief business development officer, EGI has not been shy in positioning itself as the Australian version of French luxury multinational LVMH. The result of which means B&O is now housed in a stable that includes several luxury fashion and homeware brands including Graff Diamonds, Kennedy (the leading multi-brand watch retailer for Cartier, Rolex, IWC and Patek Philippe) and Spanish brand Loewe.
    Kipping says EGI’s decision to invest in the brand came about due to the recognition that the ANZ market held great potential for growth but that investment was needed to realise it.
B&O’s global strategic focus did not extend to company-owned stores and as such a partnership with a local master dealer was the clear direction, he says. “EGI has wasted no time in auctioning the investment needed and promised. We have moved two locations and upgraded them to sensory experience stores, doubled the level of marketing investment in the brand and invested in people via enhanced training and a broadening of the organisational chart, adding more headcount to provide a better end service internally and externally.” Clearly the move has proved a profitable one with the Australian operations boasting significant growth in a period where other luxury retailers are struggling.
B&O’s current offering includes six types of wireless speaker systems, five different television products, 11 speaker offerings, two sound systems, four Bluetooth speaker systems and 10 different headphone types as well as numerous apps and accessories all designed to combine technological excellence with emotional appeal in what the brand itself terms a “sensational design language”.
Kipping says he’s unsure how much of the overall revenue the Australasian market accounts for but notes that it is “significant”.
    While an increased marketing push has helped boost the Australasian coffers, its success is largely due to the introduction of the B&O Play ‘‘on-the-go’’ standalone range of speakers and headphones that since its introduction in 2012 has allowed consumers access to the brand’s sleek design at a low entry point, he says. “We’re seeing people come in who are in their 20s, buying into the brand.
“You can get into a pair of Bang & Olufsen headphones for under $200. Right at the other end of the scale there’s people who have been with the brand for many, many years still purchasing, repeat purchasing, and adding to their existing systems well into their 70s.”
In an interview with The Australian newspaper late last year Kipping noted B&O’s current offering was the best brand portfolio it had ever had.
“We’ve become a lot more accessible in one sense and a lot more luxurious and exclusive in another… we’re appealing to more and more people.”
In April last year the group opened its first Australian sensory store in Melbourne. The next generation store, designed in collaboration with local architects Bates Smarts and the global Bang & Olufsen design team, spans 381sqm and is the fourth largest of its kind globally.
    Its breakout spaces include a revolving wall where customers can pick and choose their own audio adventure and a dedicated active acoustic zone that allows customers to immerse themselves in the brand’s signature sound. The hero of the store occupies almost a quarter of its space and is the largest interactive speaker wall in the country. Kipping says the size in itself is very unusual – both for B&O itself and also the audiovisual world generally.
“The 1920s building it is located in provides a nod to our birth heritage of 1925, when it all began in Struer. It is designed to surprise people by bringing a sense of luxury look and feel, as well as experience, to buying television and hi-fi, including a coffee bar area to just sit and take in the ambience of the location.
“Turning walls enable a customer to view a number of different television sizes, types and stand positions from a single seat and a loudspeaker wall hides and reveals different types of loudspeaker depending on the customers choice. Finally, a dedicated experience room, with our top end loudspeakers and television combination takes home entertainment to a whole new level of luxury.”
This innovative, interactive way of doing business is a world away from the brand’s origins when a young Dane by the name of Svend Olufsen began tinkering with a relatively new piece of wireless technology, now known as a radio transmitter in 1924. A year later he teamed up with fellow engineer, and former classmate, Peter Bang and the pair set up a makeshift laboratory in the attic of Olufsen’s ancestral home.
The first commercially viable product to bear the B&O name was produced in 1927. Labelled the Eliminator, it enabled a radio to be connected directly to the mains rather than being battery-operated which had been previously the norm.
    Later that same year the pair moved production to a new, purpose-built factory just outside the town of Struer, around 350km west of Copenhagen, where Peter concentrated on the technology while Svend dealt with business operations.
Having their factory burnt down by pro-Nazi saboteurs unhappy as B&O’s refusal to collaborate with the Germans did little to dissuade the pair who rebuilt and continued to concentrate on quality materials and the application of new technology. Early products included the Five Lamper, a radio in a walnut and maple cabinet that took its aesthetic cues from furniture, a radiogramophone and a tone-film public address system for use in cinemas.
In the mid-‘80s the brand entertained plans to develop new mobile phones, MP3 players and recordable hard disk drives but following the global financial crisis of 2008, abandoned these to focus on its traditional strengths of high quality audio and video products.
It wasn’t until 1990 that the brand opened dedicated B&O stores selling directly to users instead of selling through retailers.
    In 1997 B&O opened new headquarters in Struer where almost a third of the town are employed by the brand. Affectionately known as ‘The Farm’, the building covers a total area of 1121 square metres and continues the brand’s unorthodox approach to design. Inspired by the solitary farmhouses typical of the area, the new main building and its courtyard boasts glass floors, staircases, and ceilings as well as an unfettered view of all activities. While numerous high-profile designers including Henning Moldenhawer and Jacob Jensen have put their name to B&O products, the brand prefers to hire designers rather than employing them directly.
In addition its pioneering design team only spends two days per month at B&O headquarters and construct initial versions of products out of cardboard, paper, plastic or whatever is at hand.
The company believes this approach gives the designers the freedom and flexibility to take a fresh approach to each new product.
Yet this fluid approach to work does not translate to the company’s sustainability and corporate social responsibility obligations, these it takes very seriously. Being the producer of audiovisual goods has meant its manufacturing process has always been the subject of much curiosity.
    To this end each product has a project manager that must sign-off that the product will meet the relevant environmental design standards otherwise the product cannot progress to the next development stage. In addition, testing is carried out to simulate the dismantling process at the disposal after 15–20 years of use to ensure that the product can actually be separated into the appropriate fractions. This process also generates suggestions for improvement in utilisation of waste products that can be applied to subsequent development projects.
As well as consumer products the company also produces business-to-business services, particularly in the area of custom audio-visual installations for car manufacturers, and the service industry. Additionally the company’s expertise in aluminium manufacturing is available to other businesses for the production of non-B&O products. Owing to both its aesthetic and durable properties, aluminium has always been the brand’s go-to core material. For this reason the farm boasts its own anodizing department consisting of 50 baths, each with its own function ranging from degreasing and preserving, to staining and sealing.
In order to meet its sustainability obligations, the waste water containing remnants of colourants and aluminium is cleaned in an internal cleaning unit before being transported to public utility cleaning facilities. The waste water is neutralised during cleaning.
Sludge from the internal cleaning unit is then drained and compacted into filter cakes prior to removal. The aluminium-based sludge is then reused in production processes for concrete. Yet more proof that the B&O design philosophy was built to endure.
Text ‘BANG’ to +61 428 295 774 for more information
0 notes
bybespoke · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Bespoke offers a wide range of Best Home Loewe Television in Adelaide with superior picture quality, smart features, and seamless integration. Find the ideal Loewe TV to elevate your home entertainment experience. For more info visit our website.
0 notes
bybespoke · 3 months ago
Text
Bespoke offers a wide range of Best Home Loewe Television in Adelaide with superior picture quality, smart features, and seamless integration. Find the ideal Loewe TV to elevate your home entertainment experience. For more info visit our website.
0 notes