3D Prints
3D printing has become an important part of my artistic and design process, allowing me to transform digital ideas into tangible forms. I use it as a tool for experimentation, exploring different shapes, textures, and materials through an iterative process of modeling, printing, and testing.
What interests me most is the way 3D printing connects imagination with physical reality. It allows me to develop sculptural forms that move between digital fabrication, object-making, and artistic storytelling.
DnD Bottle Design
This DnD bottle design sits somewhere between artifact and invitation. A container not only for liquid, but for imagination—as if a dungeon master once bottled a moment of the campaign and left it here for wandering hands to discover.
Death Potion Bottle
Echolocation Potion Bottle
Wisdom Potion Bottle
Meine's different Personalities
This series was created using resin 3D prints based on a loved one, exploring how identity can shift through emotion, memory, and imagination. Instead of presenting a single fixed portrait, I was interested in showing different personalities and emotional states of the same person through subtle narrative details, costumes, poses, and objects.
By using digital sculpting and resin printing, I could translate intimate personal observations into physical miniature forms. The work moves between portraiture, character design, and emotional documentation, turning everyday personality traits into collectible-like sculptural figures.
Hanna
This character was modeled in ZBrush, 3D printed in resin, and hand painted. By pressing the earring on the ear, the sculpture suddenly screams :)
In this work, I used humor and exaggeration to highlight small but memorable characteristics of a loved one. I'm interested in how playful interaction and caricature can transform personal memories and personality traits into sculptural objects, somewhere between portrait, toy, and emotional archive.
Rapid 3D prints of my classmates
Through my 3D practice, I became interested in digitally preserving the presence of the people around me. By sculpting and printing figures inspired by my classmates, I explore a form of contemporary taxidermy, not of bodies, but of memory, personality, and shared moments in time.
3D scanning, modeling, and printing allow me to archive gestures, expressions, and relationships that would otherwise remain temporary. The printed object becomes both a portrait and a trace, existing somewhere between documentation, sculpture, and emotional preservation.
In my practice, 3D printing is not only a production method but part of the artwork itself. This piece moves between digital sculpture, mold-making, and edible material. I designed the character digitally, printed it in resin, and used it to leave an imprint in dough, turning a virtual object into something tactile and temporary.
What interests me is how the character travels through different forms: from sketch, to 3D model, to print, to physical trace. The print becomes both a tool and an artifact, carrying the memory of the process itself.