
Every sculpture we create begins with an idea, but it takes many hands, many hours, and many careful steps before that idea becomes a finished piece. Our sculptures are made from resin, a material valued for its durability, fine surface detail, and ability to preserve delicate sculptural forms. While resin allows us to produce consistent pieces, the soul of each sculpture still comes from human craftsmanship.
Behind every finished sculpture is a process that combines digital design, traditional clay sculpting, mold-making, hand refinement, and painting. Each stage is essential, and none of them can be rushed.
Digital Design and 3D Modeling
The first step begins with our designers. Before any physical sculpture is made, the concept is developed on a computer through digital design and 3D modeling.
This stage usually takes more than 20 hours. During this time, the designer works on the overall form, proportions, posture, expression, and decorative details of the sculpture. Every angle needs to be considered carefully, because a sculpture is not viewed from only one side. It must feel balanced and complete from the front, side, and back.
Digital modeling allows us to explore the structure of the piece with precision. The designer can adjust the silhouette, refine the composition, and make sure the final design has both visual beauty and production feasibility. This step gives the sculpture its foundation.
Clay Sculpting and Fine Carving
After the digital design is completed, the process moves from the screen to the hands of the clay sculptor.
Based on the designer’s model, the clay sculptor creates a physical clay version of the sculpture. This is one of the most important stages in our production process, because it brings warmth, texture, and artistic detail into the piece.
The sculptor carefully builds the form, adjusts the proportions, and refines the surface by hand. Small details such as facial features, fabric folds, hair texture, muscle structure, ornaments, and symbolic elements are carved and corrected repeatedly.
Even though the sculpture begins with digital design, the clay stage gives it a more human feeling. The artist’s hand can soften certain lines, strengthen emotional expression, and add subtle details that make the sculpture feel alive.

Mold Making from the Clay Sculpture
Once the clay sculpture is approved, it is used to create a mold. This stage is called mold-making, and it allows the original clay sculpture to be preserved and reproduced.
The clay sculpture is carefully prepared so that every detail can be captured. A mold is then made from the finished clay piece. From this process, we create the master mold, which becomes the foundation for future production.
The quality of the master mold is extremely important. If the mold does not capture the details correctly, the final resin pieces will lose sharpness, texture, or accuracy. For this reason, the mold-making process must be handled with great care.
A good master mold allows us to reproduce the sculpture while keeping the original design, carving details, and surface character as close as possible to the clay model.

Resin Production Using the Master Mold
After the master mold is completed, it is used for production.
Resin is poured or formed using the mold to create the base sculpture. At this stage, the sculpture comes out as a raw white cast, often called a white blank or unfinished resin piece.
Resin is an ideal material for our sculptures because it can hold fine details well. It allows delicate textures and carved surfaces from the original model to remain visible in the final product. It is also stable and suitable for decorative sculptures that are meant to last.
However, when a resin piece first comes out of the mold, it is not finished yet. It still needs careful inspection, cleaning, and refinement before it can become a completed sculpture.

Hand Refinement and Painting
The final stage is hand finishing.
Each white resin blank is checked and refined by hand. Small mold lines, rough edges, or tiny imperfections are carefully removed. The surface is polished, adjusted, and prepared for painting.
After the refinement is complete, the sculpture is painted. This stage gives the piece its final character. Colors are applied with attention to depth, shadow, texture, and material effect. Depending on the design, the painting process may include base colors, layered tones, highlights, aging effects, metallic details, or hand-painted facial features.
This final step is where the sculpture truly comes to life. The painting is not only about adding color. It is about enhancing the form, emphasizing details, and giving the sculpture its final emotional presence.

A Balance of Technology and Craftsmanship
Our process combines modern technology with traditional craftsmanship. Digital design helps us build a precise foundation. Clay sculpting adds artistic depth and human touch. Mold-making preserves the original form. Resin production allows the sculpture to be recreated with consistency. Hand refinement and painting make each finished piece feel complete.
From the first digital model to the final painted sculpture, every step matters. Although resin is the main material, craftsmanship is what gives each piece its identity.
For us, a sculpture is more than a product. It is the result of design, patience, skill, and respect for detail. Every finished piece carries the work of designers, sculptors, mold makers, craftsmen, and painters — all contributing to one final object made to be displayed, appreciated, and kept.
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