Marten Herma Anderson’s resin lamps are based on a childhood moment where candy melted onto a lightbulb, forming irregular translucent layers. The lamps are produced by casting pigmented resin directly around the bulb, allowing the material to settle and cure into uneven, layered surfaces. This process creates visible shifts in color density, with some sections appearing more saturated while others diffuse light more softly when illuminated.
Each lamp includes a resin shade supported by a fiberglass structure and paired with a waxed ceramic base. Surface details such as trapped air bubbles, seams, and impressions from the casting process are left visible rather than removed. The components are assembled to maintain structural support while preserving the layered finish created during curing. The series includes multiple variations that differ in color composition, thickness, and distribution of resin across each piece.
Candy-Inspired Resin Lamps
Marten Herma Anderson’s Resin Lamps Use Pigment and Light Layering
Trend Themes
1. Layered Material Aesthetics - Aesthetic emphasis on stratified, translucent materials creates opportunities for products that exploit controlled opacity and color depth to alter perceived form and function.
2. Visible Manufacture Details - Celebration of seams, bubbles, and tooling marks signals consumer interest in authenticity-led design that foregrounds production artifacts as part of product storytelling.
3. Pigment and Light Interaction - Deliberate manipulation of pigment density and light diffusion points toward new ways to integrate visual dynamics into functional objects for mood and perception control.
Industry Implications
1. Lighting Design - Specialty lamps and fixtures may shift toward material-driven light modulation approaches that redefine ambiance through integrated pigment and casting techniques.
2. Interior Decor and Furniture - Home furnishings could incorporate cast translucent components as focal elements, offering novel textural contrasts and layered color effects within living spaces.
3. Advanced Materials and Resin Manufacturing - Material suppliers and formulators stand to deliver customized resins and additives that enable controlled curing, color stratification, and preserved surface character for artisans and producers.