The Transparent x LN-CC Collab Puts Rippled Glass Over 120 Watts

Transparent and LN-CC stripped away the plastic housing to expose a modular architecture.

The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC

Summary

  • The Build: Audio hardware brand Transparent teamed up with London lifestyle retailer LN-CC to create a custom speaker unit.
  • The Architecture: The design swaps standard plastic for a modular, semi-translucent rippled glass enclosure that exposes the internal wiring and allows for component repair or upgrades.
  • The Drop: This is a limited edition run of only 15 units created for LN-CC’s 15th anniversary, featuring Bluetooth 5.0 and 120W output.

Most consumer audio gear tries to hide the messy insides behind matte black plastic. Transparent went the other way, linking up with London’s LN-CC to build a rig that mirrors the physical walls of a nightclub.

That specific club texture defines the chassis. We see a semi-translucent, rippled glass shell that pulls visual DNA straight from L8te, the retailer’s 1970s-style interior venue.


The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC

Peering through those distorted panels reveals a setup built on honest assembly rather than glued-together secrets. Transparent kept the electronics exposed and modular, meaning you can swap out parts instead of tossing the whole unit when standards change.

Upgradability often suggests a trade-off in raw strength, but this system pushes 120 watts of output to match the brand’s standard lineup. It pairs that driver power with Bluetooth 5.0, proving a device can be repairable without sacrificing the thump.

The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC
The Transparent x LN-CC

Getting your hands on this specific configuration requires serious timing. LN-CC commissioned only 15 units to mark their 15th year in the game, making this a functional collector’s item rather than a mass-market SKU.