
You know that clear plastic pen you’ve chewed the cap off a hundred times? The one that’s probably rolling around in your junk drawer right now? Well, someone just turned it into a lamp and it’s kind of genius. Seeing design variations of products that are different from each other is a refreshing take especially if it’s done right.
Italian design brand Seletti teamed up with designer Mario Paroli to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the BIC Cristal pen in the most extra way possible. They blew it up to 12 times its original size and transformed it into a floor lamp, pendant light, and wall-mounted fixture. Because apparently, nothing says “happy birthday” quite like making something absurdly large and hanging it from your ceiling.
Designer: Mario Paroli for Seletti

The BIC Lamp debuted at Maison & Objet 2026, and it’s exactly what you’d imagine if you scaled up that iconic ballpoint pen you’ve been using since elementary school. The transparent barrel is there, the hexagonal body is there, and yes, the caps come in those three classic colors: black, blue, and red. The only thing missing is the mysterious teeth marks we all somehow ended up making during boring classes or meetings.

What makes this collaboration so charming is how it taps into universal nostalgia. The BIC Cristal isn’t just any pen. Since 1950, when French-Italian entrepreneur Marcel Bich acquired the patent for the ballpoint mechanism from Hungarian-Argentine inventor László Bíró, this little writing tool has lived in every pencil case, backpack, and desk drawer imaginable. It’s been clutched by artists and writers, and it’s earned spots in the permanent collections at New York’s Museum of Modern Art and Paris’s Centre Georges Pompidou. For something so ordinary, it’s surprisingly extraordinary.


Seletti’s art director Stefano Seletti explains their approach perfectly: “We transform a universally and instantly recognisable shape that lives in everyone’s memory, into something completely new”. And that’s the magic here. The lamp doesn’t reinvent the wheel or try too hard to be clever. It just takes something we all recognize and makes us see it differently. The design uses carefully selected materials that echo the original pen, but instead of ink flowing through that clear barrel, you get LED technology lighting up your space. It’s functional, playful, and surprisingly versatile. Whether you mount it on a wall, suspend it as a pendant, or place it as a floor lamp, the BIC Lamp brings that same pop-culture irreverence Seletti is known for.

The lamp works because it doesn’t take itself too seriously. It’s design with a wink, a nod to our shared experiences with this humble writing instrument. How many times have we frantically searched for a pen, only to find three BIC Cristals that may or may not work? How many have we borrowed and never returned? The pen is part of our daily rituals, so familiar we barely notice it anymore. By supersizing it and giving it a new function, Paroli and Seletti invite us to reconsider everyday objects around us. Good design doesn’t always mean creating something entirely new. Sometimes it means looking at what’s already there and asking, “What if?” What if the pen we’ve used for decades became something else? What if we celebrated its simplicity by making it impossible to ignore?

The BIC Lamp transforms a desktop essential into a domestic icon, proving that the best design ideas often come from the most unexpected places. It’s memory-driven design at its finest, taking something ordinary and making it extraordinary simply by changing its scale and purpose.
