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Some Taiwanese modelers are revitalizing their craft via traditional skills and 3D printing technology, the Taiwan Sculptor Association said
By Wu Po-hsuan / Staff reporter
As Taiwan’s molding and sculpture factories have gradually moved to China, and the skills of older masters are becoming lost among the younger generation, a group of action figure and collectable toy prototype designers in Taiwan who have been striving to preserve the hand-carving and molding skills, have reopened workshops, and they rebuilding Taiwan’s reputation by showing its works at major international toy fairs and expos.
Founding member and chief supervisor of Taiwan Sculptor Association, Lee Yong-cheng (???), said that all products need an actual sample before going into mass production, and that the designer of the “prototype” of a thermos cup, a smartphone or a lamp is called an industrial designer or product developer.
In the past, a prototype designer for toys, action or model figures usually carved the prototype sample by hand, but with advanced technology, some also use 3D printing to make the sample models, he said, adding that the association has about 50 to 60 members, and more than 10,000 followers on its Facebook page.
Photo: Wu Po-hsuan, Taipei Times
Another founding member, Yu Heng-hsin (???), said a prototype designer’s work involves drawing, sculpting, understanding the human body structure, anatomy and biology. Yu added that in Taiwan there was an industry of molding, manufacturing, painting and exporting model figures, but it gradually moved to China about 20 years ago, so the traditional skills of clay sculpture and molding have withered.
However, about ten years ago, convenience stores began launching points-based rewards systems, allowing consumers to redeem points for toys, and a trend of collecting action figure and collectable toys began in the US and Japan, so a new generation of prototype designers stepped into the job, he said.
Unfortunately, the prototype designers in Taiwan only design the samples, and the products are produced in China, but as the labor cost in China has also been increasing in the last few years, some factories have moved to Southeast Asian countries, he added.
Photo: Wu Po-hsuan, Taipei Times
In view of this situation, Yu last year established a base factory in Taiwan, with the youngest employee being 43 years old. He said he had to train all employees, as no school departments teach the skills, but with his heart set on passing down Taiwan’s handicraft, he plans to gather other designers and together attend major international toy fairs and expos to promote Taiwanese brands next year.
Fancy Frontier exhibition project manager Tseng Jung-pei (???) said Taiwan began a platform to display prototype action figures and toys, and with the annual Taipei Toy Festival gathering people with the same hobbies, the designers established an association and held competitions. The Fancy Frontier competition has been held for the past 10 years, attracting many creators who have exhibited works of a wide range of styles.
The model figures and toys include crayfishes, bronze-like monsters, round animals and a working man with a salted-fish head.
The 47-year-old Yu said before becoming a toy figure prototype designer, he worked as an art designer at a comic publishing house and a game company, and later at a construction company that designed the National Museum of Marine Biology and Aquarium, where he became interested in crayfishes.
As he has never forgotten the challenge and sense of achievement of “turning something into a 3D object,” he left a 3D printing company last year and founded a workshop (?????) to materialize his love for crayfish into toy figures called Crayfish Monster World (?????).
Prototype designer Jiang Ting-wei (???), founder of the Partner Toys workshop, said he became a prototype designer nine years ago because he loves animals, but could not keep them as pets, so he made them into model figures, and his works are mainly living creatures, that are characterized by being “round and cute.”
Prototype designer Tu Hsun (??), founder of Hsun Craft Studio, said he began designing toy figures about seven years ago. His creations used to be derivative work of monsters and game characters, but he recently created his own brand of monsters inspired by the artistic styles of the Bronze Age in China.
Cheng Chao-yu (???), a 30-year-old new prototype designer, said he has an educational background in the fine arts. He started trying 3D printing in the past two years, and has attended some model figure competitions.
His main creation is called “Salted Fish Life (????),” depicting the wary life of an office worker, trying to survive in a big city, he said, adding that he hopes people who buy his toy figures would feel as if they have a salted-fish man accompanying them when they are working overtime.
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