Marset Dipping Portable Rechargeable Lamp
HAY
Director: Kristoffer Borgli
The Marset Dipping Portable Rechargeable Lamp is one of those rare pieces that manages to be both playful and quietly assured. A sphere of hand-blown glass, washed in soft gradients of colour, it reads as a sculptural object first and a light source second. Even unlit, it holds its own.
In The Drama, the brown and orange-toned version appears in Charlie and Emma’s Boston apartment, sitting comfortably within the film’s mid-century sensibility. It is a small detail, but a telling one. The kind of piece that suggests a considered interior rather than a styled set.
Each lamp is created through a meticulous, almost painterly process. The glass shade is repeatedly dipped in pigment, building up concentric layers that soften and diffuse the light. The result is a warm, atmospheric glow, with colour that feels embedded rather than applied. The paint quite literally becomes the shade, shaping both tone and texture.
Designed for flexibility as much as beauty, this portable, rechargeable lamp can move easily from shelf to bedside, from dining table to terrace. It is as practical as it is decorative, which perhaps explains its quiet confidence on screen.
Available in six colourways, with a choice of brass or graphite base, the Dipping Lamp offers enough variation to slip into a range of interiors while still retaining its distinct character. A small piece, certainly, but one with presence.

Akari lamp light sculptures by Noguchi
Designer: Isamu Noguchi
Directors: Quentin Tarantino, Kristoffer Borgli
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