Our story
A family studio, run out of a barn.
Resin Dimension Studio runs out of a barn on twenty acres in the North Carolina countryside. We're not farmers — though we do own a tractor, and somehow ended up with four barn cats, a chicken, a rooster, and a Rottweiler–Lab mix who supervises all of it.
We're a family of seven, with four kids still at home ranging from three to fifteen. What began as a single resin printer in the barn has turned into a full-on family project.
Meet the crew
Right now it's mostly the two of us doing the work — but the rest of the kids are already lining up with ideas of their own.
Nate
Chief tinkerer
It started with me and a pretty simple rationale: I play a lot of board games, so a resin printer was a no-brainer. Then I kept finding more reasons — honestly, I just think 3D printing is awesome, and that was enough.
Isa · 15
Art & finishing
Isa is the one elbow-deep in it with me right now. She loves art and making things — she paints constantly — so cleaning up prints and bringing them to life with paint is right up her alley.
Franco · 12
Up next
Franco is big into video games and making YouTube content, and he wants to print creations for his friends.
Brielle · 8
Up next
Brielle has plans for custom jewelry and little containers — practical and stylish.
Lio · 3
Quality control
Lio has exactly one request, repeated daily: a monster truck. We are working on it.
And my wife? She's mostly just glad this keeps me out of her hair.
Where the magic happens
Everything happens in the barn. The print station lives inside, where digital files become prints, prints get washed and cured, and Isa works her painting magic.
Every piece we sell is printed, cleaned, and finished by hand, right here. We obsess over the small things — crisp edges, clean supports, and a finish that does the sculpt justice.
A few of our prints
Some favorites from the barn — including busts and statues we've printed of the kids.
Alongside our own designs, we print a curated range of officially licensed miniatures from Mammoth Factory Games. Those are licensed physical prints — the original sculpts and digital files remain the property of their creators, and each listing credits them accordingly.
We're just getting started, and it's very much a family affair. Thanks for supporting a handmade, home-grown studio. — Nate & the whole crew