Candle holders have always favored traditional taper candles and their elegant, statuesque forms. Tea lights, meanwhile, get relegated to shallow dishes and basic glass cups, functional but hardly inspiring. The problem is practical as much as aesthetic. Most holders treat tea lights as single-use items, offering no solution for storage or replacement beyond keeping a stash somewhere in a kitchen drawer. That leaves you with a scattered collection of metal tins and the constant need to hunt for spares when one burns out.
The TOLO Tea Candle holder takes a different approach, drawing inspiration from an unexpected source to solve both issues at once. Designer Liam de la Beyodere looked at how Polo mints stack neatly inside their cylindrical wrapper and applied the same logic to tea lights. The result is a minimalist metal tube that holds multiple candles vertically, with one sitting at the top ready for use while others wait below. It’s a simple idea that gives tea lights the height and presence of traditional candles without any of the usual mess or inconvenience.
Designer: Liam de la Beyodere
The holder itself is straightforward in construction. A seamless metal tube, likely brass or gold-plated steel, features a precise cutout at the top that exposes just enough of the uppermost candle for lighting. The polished finish adds a touch of elegance, while the clean cylindrical form fits easily into modern interiors. Different heights are available depending on how many tea lights you want to store inside, turning what’s typically a storage problem into part of the design’s appeal.
Of course, the real advantage is how effortless this makes candle replacement. When the top tea light burns out, you simply remove the spent tin and the next one rises into position. No rummaging through drawers, no loose candles rolling around in cabinets, and no need to interrupt your evening to fetch replacements. The tube keeps everything organized and accessible, which is exactly the kind of thoughtful detail that separates good design from merely functional objects.
What sets TOLO apart is how it reframes tea lights entirely. Instead of treating them as cheap alternatives to proper candles, the design gives them structure and verticality that command attention. The holder looks intentional even when unlit, standing as a sculptural object rather than just another utilitarian accessory. That shift in perception, from disposable to deliberate, is what makes the concept feel genuinely fresh rather than just clever packaging.
TOLO remains a concept for now, existing only as renderings rather than a finished product. That said, the design’s simplicity and practicality suggest it could translate well into production, offering a more elegant solution for anyone who prefers the convenience of tea lights but wants something better than the usual uninspired holders cluttering store shelves.
The post TOLO Stacks Tea Lights in a Vertical Tube Like Polo Mints first appeared on Yanko Design.

