The jewelry store uses gold inlaid with jade as its design language. The glazed wall at the entrance is based on A Thousand Miles of Rivers and Mountains. The gradually green color is embedded with hollow metal phoenixes. The black walnut display cabinet below displays ancient carving bracelets. The floating display rack in the main exhibition area uses a combination of titanium metal and ice cracked glass. The jade safety buckle fluoresces under the illumination of the top fiber light. The holographic projection on the bottom of the cabinet converts the carving process into dynamic ink. The counters of the Guochao series are made of red lacquer paint as the base, and the 3D hard gold jewelry with a magnetic enamel color background board. You can scan the code to view the intangible cultural heritage craft videos. The private try-on area at the corner is separated by a bamboo bamboo-shaped screen, and the smart mirror cabinet next to the flannel seat has a built-in AR try-on system that allows you to switch between different jewelry combinations with a wave of your hand. The cultural exhibition area on the wall uses wooden frames with tenon and tenon structures to hang rubbings and replicas of ancient books, echoing the mechanical devices of the central booth. In the rotating crystal ball, Dunhuang Feitian and modern geometric jewelry complement each other, allowing traditional patterns to be cut and re-created in laser cutting and micro-inlay techniques.
MAX (Autodesk 3ds Max, filesize: 278 MB), OTHER (Other, filesize: 278 MB)