Some design objects earn their place on your table through sheer visual presence. The Dollight series from dolop does exactly that: a collection of sculptural table lamps that somehow manage to be playful, sophisticated, and deeply personal all at once. They’re the kind of lighting that makes you rethink what a lamp can be.
Designed by Michael Kritzer, an industrial designer with Red Dot, iF, and Cannes Lions awards to his name, Dollights are inspired by creative Kokeshi dolls, those beautifully varied Japanese wooden figures that range from traditional to wildly expressive. The connection isn’t literal. You won’t mistake these for dolls on a shelf. But the DNA is there in the proportions, that satisfying relationship between a rounded head and a tapered body, the way each silhouette feels like it has its own quiet personality.
Designer: Michael Kritzer
The origin story is a good one: Kritzer traveled to Japan with the woman who would become his wife, Sveta, and fell for the creative Kokeshi tradition. That trip first produced a Kokeshi-inspired porcelain line (which won the Red Dot), and eventually evolved into what we’re looking at now: five distinct lamp designs called Sweet, Bright, Savory, Rich, and Smooth. The names alone tell you something about the sensibility here. This isn’t a brand that takes itself too seriously, but it takes the work very seriously.
What makes Dollights genuinely interesting beyond their forms is the customization model. Each of the five designs can be configured in different colors (dolop calls them “flavors”) and textures, yielding close to 100 combinations per design. That’s a staggering amount of choice for a product in this price range, which sits between $150 and $250. We’re not talking about picking between white and black. We’re talking about making a real decision about what you want this object to be in your space: a bold red statement piece on a console table, a soft green glow on a nightstand, a warm golden accent next to a stack of books.
Every lamp is made to order in Kritzer’s San Diego workshop and ships in five to ten days. The production-on-demand approach is what enables all that variety without the waste of holding massive inventory in dozens of colorways. It also means each one is made fresh, which carries a certain appeal. There’s something satisfying about knowing an object was produced because you wanted it, not because a factory in another country bet that someone might.
The materials are worth noting too. Kritzer uses premium PLA sourced from the USA and recycled PLA from Europe. It’s a responsible choice that also happens to produce beautiful results. The ribbed and lattice textures across the collection catch and diffuse light in ways that make these lamps look completely different depending on whether they’re switched on or off. That duality is intentional. Kritzer describes them as “useful sculpture,” and I think that framing is exactly right. A Dollight earns its spot on your table around the clock, not just after sunset.
I find myself drawn to design that rewards close looking, and these lamps deliver on that front. The surface patterns are intricate without being busy. The forms are organic but clearly considered. There’s a confidence to the shapes that comes from someone who has spent real time studying proportion and knows when to stop refining.
A portion of every sale supports local San Diego charities through dolop’s Sweetest Slice program, which adds a layer of community intention that feels genuine rather than performative. It’s consistent with the overall ethos: small-batch, locally made, thoughtfully designed, and priced so that owning something special doesn’t require a bespoke budget or a six-month wait.
In a market flooded with either disposable lighting or unattainably expensive design objects, Dollights occupy a sweet spot that more brands should be aiming for. They’re accessible without being generic, personal without being precious, and beautiful without demanding that you build a room around them. That’s a harder balance to strike than it looks.
The post These Sculptural Japanese Lamps Come in 100 Colors for $150 first appeared on Yanko Design.

