Vietnam, small enough to hold in your hand
Việt Nam, thu nhỏ trong lòng bàn tay
We started with a simple question, how do you hold on to the little corners of Vietnam you walk past every day but rarely stop to notice?
Founder at the workshopOver ten years building things on a screen, then I printed Vietnam to hold in my hand
Hi there, I’m Hải, born in 1988, the person behind Toys Uncle. At the workshop everyone fondly calls me “chú” (uncle) Hải, so let me keep that warm, familiar way of greeting you.
Before Toys Uncle came to be, I spent more than ten years in the world of advertising film. Pouring a part of my youth into every role from Filmmaker and Executive Producer to Digital Planner, my colleagues and I were lucky to work alongside many large domestic brands across more than a hundred campaigns. Those films, from modest projects to campaigns carrying heavy budget pressure, were fortunate to reach and resonate with millions. It was a long, meaningful chapter, a part of my youth I always cherish and take pride in whenever I look back.
Then a friend nudged me to look into 3D printing. A lover of technology who enjoys tinkering, and eager to try building a startup of my own, I gave it a go. And I got hooked. The first time a 3D model I had built on the computer stepped into the real world, something I could hold, spin, tap on the table, it felt like a new horizon opening up. The same old skill, but this time a real object in my hands. That feeling was, honestly... just incredible.
For over ten years I built living frames behind a screen. Now I print what belongs to Vietnam so anyone can carry it with them. Three years into 3D printing, from fumbling through it bit by bit to finally having a corner of my own workshop, I keep reminding myself of one thing: if Toys Uncle makes Vietnamese pieces, it must make them with respect and care, down to the smallest detail.
From pixels to reality. A decade drawing on screens, now packed into your hands.
Technology shapes it, hands perfect it.
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First, FDM 3D printing and bio-based plastic create the precise blank over many hours of continuous machine time. Then our team carries out the finishing and assembly entirely by hand to complete a product that meets our quality bar.
A combined process: 3D printing shapes it, hand-finishing completes it.
Real life next to its miniatureWe tell the story of Vietnam as it is today
When it comes to Vietnamese cultural gifts, many go for mythical creatures, sacred beasts, feng-shui motifs, beautiful, but everywhere, and sometimes a little distant. We chose a closer path.
Toys Uncle tells the story of everyday Vietnam, the Vietnam of right now: the sidewalk stool, the drip-coffee phin, the lam bus, the nón lá, the classic rubber sandals, the old thermos, the steaming morning pho. Not the Vietnam of history books, the Vietnam you meet every day, familiar and lovable and just a little funny.
Because it's so everyday, it works for everyone. Vietnamese people see their childhood, their hometown. Visitors see exactly the Vietnam they just walked through and fell for. And because it's contemporary Vietnamese life, playful, warm, proud, it never blends in with anyone else, never looks like mass-produced souvenirs, and never borrows another country's flavor.
Not the Vietnam in a museum, the Vietnam you meet on the street every morning.
Every gift is a journey through Vietnamese culture.
Browse the collections, or message our Fanpage and we'll help you pick the right gift.
