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STUDIO PRINS

FOR PEOPLE ALLERGIC TO COLOR                    WHEN MINIMALISM GETS DRAMATIC                    BECAUSE ORDINARY ISN’T AN OPTION

A MONOCHROMATIC REBELLION IN THE SHAPE OF A VASE.

Born from water.
Built with precision.
Designed for those who
refuse the ordinary.

This vase doesn’t hold flowers - it humbles them. Born from the flowing geometry of water

engineered into a form that humbles everything placed beside it.

 

This isn’t décor - this is monochromatic provocation.

BIRTH OF A SCULPTURAL REBELLION

The Imminence of Illusions

It all began with water - a photograph of its surface, caught in a moment where light fractured into organic forms.

I traced that moment and resurrected it in 3D, letting the movmement of liquid become a flowing form frozen in time.

This design stands at the cross section of the intrigue of movement, the discipline of design, and a refusal to create

anything that could ever be called “ordinary.”

 

This vase is what happens when nature, technology, and an aversion to color form an alliance.

Close-up of a modern 3D-printed decorative vase with curved organic shapes
Minimalist black 3D-printed sculptural vase displayed on a modern pedestal in a neutral interior setting

WHY THIS VASE?

The Case for This Vase

It’s subtle, yet striking, making it endlessly intriguing - this is the rare kind of design that doesn’t compete with your interior, but completes it.

This is for the lovers of design who know a true statement piece doesn't scream for attention

MAKE IT YOURS

Product

...your interior deserves at least one good decision.Choose the silhouette that commands the room without raising its voice — a monochromatic masterpiece that won’t beg for attention, because it already owns it.

THE ORIGIN STORY

The Making of a Masterpiece

This piece wasn’t designed - it was engineered into existence with deliberate obsession.

 

It starts with a fragment of water, traced and transformed, then rebuilt in 3D through a rendering method I created

because anything standard felt offensively insufficient.

Each vase is 3D printed at 100% infill - meaning it’s heavier, denser, and unapologetically overbuilt compared to the

flimsy, hollow things most printers spit out. The process takes longer, the material costs more, and the result is

infinitely worth it.

Made from PLA, a corn-based biodegradable material, it’s crafted to endure everything except your desire for color.

Minimalist 3D-printed sculptural vase in monochrome beige displayed with a single flower
Monochrome display of multiple 3D-printed sculptural vases arranged on a shelf

THE ART OF PLACING IT

Styling through Seduction

Place it where the light can worship it - somewhere shadows can carve out every curve with dramatic precision. Keep the styling minimal: air, dust, or, if you insist on being decorative, a single branch. Anything more vibrant will

only ruin the mood. And don’t you dare place it anywhere near color - this piece is monochromatic royalty, and the rainbow is beneath it.

Let it exist the way it was meant to: stark, sculptural, dramatic, and blissfully void of anything vivid.

THE ORIGIN STORY

Behind the Brand

This vase is the best-selling design piece of Studio Prins - and for good reason. It represents everything the studio stands for: form over noise, shadows over spectacle, intention over color.

Studio Prins is a one-woman design studio led by Emma Winkler Prins - architect by training, monochrome evangelist by choice. She walked away from the rigidity of traditional architecture and built her own world using Blender, a 3D printer, and a commitment to making objects that live somewhere between art, design, and quiet

rebellion.

Here, every piece begins as an experiment: water, music, movement, or a fragment of texture transformed into sculptural form.

No team. No fuss. No unnecessary vibrancy.

Just a designer pushing boundaries - proving you don’t need color to make a statement, just the courage to create something unmistakably yours.

Black-and-white portrait of Emma holding her 3D-printed sculptural vase

FAQ — For Those Who Need “Clarity”

Where the Vase Chooses to Live

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