STAGINGMac mini verification environment. Not production.
Studio attitude

We start by asking what should last, before we shape how it looks.

More than making one lovely image quickly, we want to understand which expression, scene, or small habit should still matter to you later.

The studio cares more about leaving behind what feels like your companion than about producing a quick likeness. Before we settle on outer details, we listen for mood, habits, and the emotional texture that keeps returning in your memory.

We also try not to decide too quickly. Rather than naming a personality from one photo, we keep returning to the expressions and posture that repeat until the reading feels honest.

  • Not just similar, but truly theirs

    More than matching the surface, we want the work to hold the feeling that makes you say, “Yes, that is really my companion.”

  • No rushed conclusions

    Instead of guessing from a few images, we keep checking the moments where expression and posture return again and again.

  • Memories deserve care

    Your feelings and memories are not decoration. We think of them as the ground the work stands on, so we want to handle them carefully.

Studio structure

The studio builds results that can hold together beyond one image.

We want to make character records you can return to later, not images that stop mattering after one moment.

That is why the work usually begins with a stable base character, then grows into expressions, poses, and a proper sheet. As the pieces accumulate, the language that describes your companion becomes clearer too.

Because we do not treat a result as disposable, we keep the structure organized enough for the character to still feel steady when you return to it later.

  • Character base

    We begin by stabilizing shape and silhouette, so every expression and pose that follows still feels grounded in the same companion.

  • Expression set

    This is where a bright grin or a quiet look begins to show the emotional tone that makes the character feel unmistakably alive.

  • Pose set

    We translate repeated stances and familiar rhythms of movement, so the character carries the same physical presence.

  • Character sheet

    We gather the official look into one sheet, so the core of the character stays clear and steady for future work.

Team roles

Three teammates hold different parts of the same result.

This is not a brand built around one lead figure. It is run as a team where each member carries a specific responsibility inside the same result.

Choco holds visual emotion and character tone, Obok frames the moment and the story inside it, and Cookie shapes where the result should live and how it should be delivered.

That is why the public pages are not written like one artist's personal introduction. They are arranged so the studio's roles and the value of the result read first.

  • Choco

    Visual emotion and character tone

    Choco shapes the expression, color temperature, and first visual impression that make the result feel like your companion.

  • Obok

    Moment and story framing

    Obok helps decide which scene is worth keeping, why it matters, and what kind of memory the result should carry.

  • Cookie

    Use case and deliverable structure

    Cookie organizes where the result should live next, whether as a profile image, a gift-worthy piece, or something you keep returning to.

Studio inquiry

Tell the studio what kind of result you want to trust us with.

It is okay if everything still feels a little undefined. Start with a few photos and a short story, and the studio will help shape the direction with you.