I want to start with a confession: this pendant lived in my basket for about four months. You know the drill — you add the thing, you tell yourself you'll decide later, and then every few weeks you go back and look at it again. I did that with the Ronja more times than I'd like to admit. I finally hit order. My only regret is the four months I spent not owning it.
The Order & Arrival
Shipping was fast — genuinely faster than I'd prepared myself for — and it arrived beautifully packed, with the ceramic shade cushioned properly on every side. For a hand-painted ceramic piece, that packaging matters enormously, and it turned up without a single mark or chip.

The Hand-Painting Is the Whole Point
The moment I lifted it out of the box, I understood what I'd been missing. You can see that it's hand-painted — the brushwork has tiny variations, the glaze catches the light, and it's obvious a real person sat and painted this one. It's not a printed pattern pretending to be craft. The ceramic has proper weight to it, the copper-toned fixture feels solid, and up close it reads like something that cost a great deal more than it did.
Living With It
Hung up and lit, it's even lovelier. The shade throws a soft, warm pool of light, and it's become the piece guests comment on first. It's the kind of fixture that quietly makes the whole room feel considered.
The Practical Bits I Didn't Expect to Love
Two small things won me over. First, the cord is adjustable, so I could set exactly the drop I wanted — you can hang it high over a console or low over a table or island and move it as your room changes. Second, it takes a completely normal screw-fit bulb (and one's included), which means you're not locked in: pop in a smart bulb, a dimmable bulb, a warm filament — whatever light you want, the Ronja takes it. That flexibility is rarer than it should be in a "designer-looking" pendant.
Who It's For
If you want a light that doubles as a little piece of art — and you've been hovering over the buy button like I was — this is an easy yes. If you specifically want plain, minimalist, all-metal lighting, the painted ceramic won't be your thing. For everyone else, it's lovely. You can see the current colourways and patterns on the Ronja product page, and if pendants are your rabbit hole, BO-HA's wider pendant lights collection is worth a look too.
If you've been circling the Ronja the way I did, take this as your nudge. The hand-painted ceramic is the real thing, the glow it throws is genuinely beautiful, and the practical touches — an adjustable cord and a normal bulb fitting — mean it slots into real life instead of fighting it. It's the rare piece that turned out even better in person than in the photos.
