Workbench What we are working on

We can 3D print our figures in the size you want. Contact us with your wishes and price.


New figures this spring vignette of figures of the France Prussian war 1870-71

Skirmish between French Officer and Prussian Jaeger soldier


Painted figure Carolean bugler on horse

Thank you Diowork for the great painting


New figure in shop

The figure is sold with three different heads


Here is an article of the Swedish Hobby magazine Allt om Hobby

Text in English

Model figures have long been a great interest for Dan Johansson, the man behind Digital Sculpt Figures.

A company that offers resin figures with models from several of the European conflicts during the 18th and 19th centuries, including several Carolingian figures. As a young man, Dan was an active member of the Musketeer association that gathered figure enthusiasts in the Gothenburg area. For many years, he sculpted figures in clay, a method where each model became unique.

The creation provided lots of experience with body proportions and how movements and details could be recreated on the small-scale figures. With a career as a graphic designer, the step to modeling digitally was natural when the program ZBrush appeared on the market. Suddenly, the figures could be shaped and sculpted on the computer. That was when his Digital Sculpt Figures was founded. With a 3D printer, Dan could also make physical figures from the digital creation. The prints of the first few years left a bit to be desired, but with the development of resin printers over the past five years, Dan can now print detailed figures even on small scales. Today, he has three printers from the manufacturer Elegoo in his workshop for the production of models.

The technological development made creation more fun and Dan’s figures began to arouse interest among collectors and enthusiasts all over the world. In fact, most of his figures are now sent outside the country, there are many collectors and figure painters in Germany and Great Britain. The range of 54 mm figures is the most popular, but Dan creates resin figures from 22 mm to 90 mm. It is the odd and unusual that Dan is passionate about. Making figures on the same theme as everyone else has never been interesting. It is rare that he himself is inspired to make a figure based on a single picture or painting. The figures he creates are often a collage of inspiration from the large library of historical reference literature. Dan is happy to take on special orders from initiated collectors and figure painters. Here, the requests are often much more specific. After receiving the client’s request, Dan begins by creating a sketch of the intended figure. Often, several sketches may be needed before Dan and the client have a common understanding of all the features of the figure. The digital model is then created. This step may also require several approvals before the client approves the files and the model is ready for printing in resin. More about Dan’s creation can be found at www.digitalsculpt.se

Here are some tips how we finish our figures.

We use Gorilla glue to assemble the parts this glue is good and joins the parts together quickly

We do the base painting with these colors from Citadel spray

first a layer of black and then a layer of white to create shadows.

Here a some pictures of the result of the painting


A project mission sculpt I did for Mario from Italy.

It is a sculpt based on the story of Robin Hood from the Airfix serie but now in a different scale.

The painting was done by a Ukraine artist Nikolay.

Great painting.