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WAC Crown Luminaire + Smart Fans

Crown elevates luxury fan design with a sculptural alabaster diffuser and integrated, tunable LEDs that delivers both uplight and downlight in perfect symmetry. Light glows through hand-carved stone, casting a radiant halo above and a soothing glow below. The 62-inch fan delivers over 7000 CFM on High with whisper-quiet DC efficiency. Smart-enabled and damp rated, Crown blends comfort, illumination, and art: making it ideal for grand interiors and outdoor lounges seeking elevated ambience. Crown – Modern Forms

  • 6 fan speeds through both Summer and Winter Modes
  • Silent DC motor
  • Includes BT remote control (F4-RCUBT-WT)
  • Optional wall control sold separately (F4-WCUBT-WT)
  • Compatible with MyWAC app

WAC Group Launches WAC Architectural Brand to Empower Lighting Designers with Advanced, Technology-Driven Solutions

WAC Group has launched WAC Architectural, a commercial specification lighting brand that expands the WAC legacy with a portfolio of precision-engineered luminaires designed for project-driven applications. Its offering includes advanced track systems, high-performance linear solutions, and robust exterior fixtures, each engineered for optical excellence, sophisticated beam control, architectural coherence, and a high degree of design flexibility. WAC Architectural empowers designers to push creative and technical boundaries; it is built on a foundation of four advantages…

1, Owned From Concept to Completion

2. Responsibility, Engineered at Scale

3. Precision You Can Depend On

4. Forged in the World’s Most Demanding Market

Architectural – WACGROUP

Remembering the Solemn Purpose of Memorial Day

Memorial Day is a federal holiday in the United States observed on the last Monday in May to honor and mourn U.S. military personnel who died while serving in the armed forces. The holiday traces its roots to the years immediately following the American Civil War (1861–1865), which caused massive casualties—roughly 620,000 soldiers dead, about 2% of the U.S. population at the time. Communities across the North and South began spontaneously decorating the graves of fallen soldiers with flowers, wreaths, and flags, a practice that gave rise to the original name: Decoration Day. On May 5, 1868, Major General John A. Logan, commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR)—a powerful Union veterans’ organization—issued General Order No. 11. This proclaimed May 30, 1868, as a nationwide “Decoration Day” to honor those who died in the Civil War. After World War I, the holiday expanded to honor all American service members who died in any war, not just the Civil War.  In 1968, Congress passed the Uniform Monday Holiday Act to create more three-day weekends for federal employees. This moved Memorial Day to the last Monday in May, effective in 1971, when it was also officially named “Memorial Day.” As one 1868 quote put it: “That Nation which respects and honors its dead, shall ever be respected and honored itself.”