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SESAW · 3D printing. Realized.

Some lamps stand.
Ours spills.

A paint can, caught mid-pour. The puddle is the stand. Go on — flick the switch.

SESAW

Turn it on

The first object

It looks like an accident.
It's actually engineering.

Spill — the paint-can lamp switched on, warm light glowing from inside the can onto the orange spill
“Wait — is that paint?”
“Where did you get that?”
— every guest, eventually

01

Every guest asks about it

Spill sits there looking like a small domestic disaster until someone finally cracks and asks. Then you flick the switch. The reaction is the real product.

02

Light you want to sit inside of

The bulb hides inside the can, so you never see the source — just warm 2700K light pouring over the spill. No glare. No blue-white office nonsense.

03

Born the moment you order it

No factory, no warehouse. Each lamp is 3D printed to order in our studio, one warm layer of plant-based PLA at a time. The fine print lines aren't a defect — they're a birthmark.

Illusion engineering

The spill is the structure.

There's no hidden rod. No glass tube. No wire doing the heavy lifting. The stream of colour you see is a solid, engineered column — printed in one continuous piece with the saucer it lands in.

The can floats because the spill holds it up. The centre of gravity sits low, deep in the base, which is why you can bump the table and it just… wobbles smugly.

Physics isn't being broken. It's being teased.

In the wild

Real tables. Real coffee.
Really 3D printed.

Spill lamp glowing warmly on a wooden café table beside an iced coffee
Spill lamp lit on a café table next to an open book and iced coffee
Timelapse
3D printing. Realized.

We make serious objects
that refuse to act like it.

SESAW started the way most good things do: with a mess. A tipped-over paint can, a “wait — what if it stayed like that?”, and one very long night with a 3D printer that had opinions.

We're a tiny studio in India. No factory, no warehouse — just printers, filament, and a growing list of objects that make people tilt their heads.

The name? A see-saw goes down on one side so the other can go up. Everything we make balances two things that shouldn't sit together — an accident and an engineering diagram, a joke and a genuinely good lamp.