There’s something almost magical about watching a candle melt, the way solid wax transforms into liquid and back again. Copenhagen-based studio Daydreaming Objects has taken that transformative quality and turned it into something completely unexpected: sculptural light towers that feel like they’re alive.
Their project, Soft Solids, recently won the Seoul Design Award 2025, and once you see these pieces, you’ll understand why. These aren’t your typical lamps. They’re modular sculptures that stack like organic totems, built from specially developed natural wax blends and vintage lighting hardware salvaged from mid-20th-century fixtures across Sweden, Italy, and former Czechoslovakia.
Designer: Daydreaming Objects (photos by Norbert Tukaj)
The beauty of this project lies in its contradiction. Wax feels temporary, fragile even. We think of it dripping down birthday candles or melting in the sun. But Daydreaming Objects has figured out how to make it durable, heat-resistant, and strong enough to serve as functional lighting. They’ve developed a blend using soy wax and stearin, a vegetable or animal fat derivative that’s far more sustainable than petroleum-based paraffin. The result is a material that can be endlessly recycled, melted down and recast into new forms without losing its integrity.
What makes Soft Solids particularly clever is its modularity. The Stem light sculpture, one of the standout pieces in the collection, consists of cylindrical wax units that stack vertically. You can add or remove sections, adjusting the height and composition to fit your space or mood. It’s like playing with blocks, except these blocks glow. By day, they stand as quiet, solid forms with a minimalist presence. By night, LED lights transform them into luminous columns that diffuse warmth throughout a room.
The design philosophy here draws heavily from nature. The biomorphic shapes echo patterns of growth and regeneration you’d find in plants or geological formations. The color palette reinforces this connection: off-white, soft blue, and muted green hues that evoke natural landscapes rather than synthetic spaces. Each piece receives a protective natural layer that increases strength and heat resistance while ensuring the LED light diffuses evenly through the wax.
But there’s also an element of nostalgia woven into these contemporary pieces. The vintage hardware, those metal and glass components from decades past, gives each light sculpture a sense of history. It’s not just about sustainability through using renewable materials but also about extending the life of objects that already exist. Instead of letting old lamp parts gather dust in storage or end up in landfills, Daydreaming Objects pairs them with something entirely new, creating a conversation between past and present.
The process itself is surprisingly high-tech for such an organic-feeling result. The designers use computer software and 3D printing technology to create prototypes and silicone negatives for casting the molten wax. Each shade is specifically designed to match its vintage base, ensuring both aesthetic harmony and functional compatibility. It’s a fascinating blend of digital precision and handcrafted sensibility.
What’s particularly relevant right now is how this project addresses our growing awareness of material waste and circular design. Wax is infinitely recyclable. If a piece breaks or you simply want to change it, you can melt it down and start over. This circular approach to lighting design feels refreshingly honest in a world drowning in disposable products. For anyone interested in where design is heading, Soft Solids offers a compelling glimpse. It proves that sustainable materials don’t have to look earnest or utilitarian. They can be poetic, playful, and deeply beautiful. The project challenges our assumptions about what’s permanent and what’s temporary, what’s precious and what’s everyday.
Daydreaming Objects has essentially created a new design language where transformation isn’t a bug but a feature. The very impermanence of wax becomes its strength, allowing for endless reimagining. These light sculptures don’t just illuminate rooms; they illuminate a path forward for thoughtful, regenerative design that respects both history and the future.
The post These Modular Wax Lights Stack Like Living Totems first appeared on Yanko Design.

