About Us

Where Hands Shape Wonder

Felice left journalism to chase a truth she’d always known: creation connects us. Growing up between her tailor mother’s fabric mountains and carpenter father’s wood shavings, she learned early that magic lives in the space between fingertips and materials. At 30, she turned this belief into iLAND—a workshop where curiosity meets craft.

iLAND doesn’t just make objects; it designs journeys. Their DIY kits might ask you to cut palm tree leaves 1 mm wide, or sculpting clay into mouth-watering freshly baked bread. Miniature furniture builders share benches with teens assembling resin ocean sculptures—Because here, creativity and handcraft are our common principles. 

True creativity demands both wild imagination and stubborn details. Mini furniture often undergoes more than ten iterations and upgrades, from custom fabric to paint color. Booklets read like love letters to craft—a resin ocean guide devotes 12 pages to create a gradient color seawater and realistic waves. “We’re not selling hobbies,” Felice insists, “but invitations to slow down. Whether you’re building a 20cm dream kitchen or a handmade home decoration, it’s about mastering the details that make your heartbeat visible.”

On the ultimate pursuit of the supply chain, for years iLAND has cultivated partnerships with suppliers of a dizzying array of materials and processes. By mastering the shortest path, iLAND achieves the alchemy others can’t—any materials and processes wanted and premium quality without premium markups, which help transform "impossible" ideas into works with reasonable prices.

17 years, 1000+ designs, as one of the largest suppliers of creative handicrafts, iLAND’s magic persists. A programmer decompresses by making a Victorian dollhouse project with hundreds miniatures. A teacher uses their diorama box to show students how marine ecosystems work. When a customer mails back a kit transformed into something wholly unexpected—like clock gears repurposed into a pendant—the team displays it proudly.

Because iLAND isn’t about perfection. It’s about traces of humanity: the slight wobble in a hand-glazed mug, the intentional asymmetry in an artisan’s stitch. Proof that in a digital age, wonder still grows where hands meet materials.