The Art of Resin: How Each Piece Is Made
Every piece of resin art begins with a vision — a swirl of color, a flash of metallic gold catching the light, a pattern that will never be repeated. At Daydream Decor, our artisans pour each piece by hand, and the results are as unpredictable as they are beautiful. No two items are ever identical.
The process starts with premium epoxy resin, carefully measured and mixed with pigments sourced from around the world. Metallic powders — real gold, copper, and silver — are added to create the luminous veining that has become a signature of our work. The pigments are not simply stirred in; they are layered, dripped, and blown across the surface using heat guns and careful tilting of the mold.
Temperature and humidity play a critical role. Too warm, and the resin cures too quickly, trapping unwanted air bubbles. Too cool, and it may not cure evenly. Our workshop maintains precise climate control, and each pour is timed to the minute. A single placemat takes between 24 and 48 hours to fully cure before it can be demolded and inspected.
The finishing process is equally painstaking. Each piece is sanded through progressively finer grits — from 400 up to 3000 — then polished to a glass-like finish that is smooth to the touch and resistant to scratching. Edges are rounded and buffed, and the underside receives a non-scratch felt or rubber backing. Only after passing a final quality inspection does a piece earn the Daydream Decor mark.
This is not mass production. It is craft at its most deliberate — a commitment to creating objects that are as functional as they are beautiful, and that carry the unmistakable warmth of the human hand.
Written by
Daydream Studio


