Fr~m “Just a Hobby” to Mild obsession.

It started with one figure and a half-dried brush. Now there are shelves full of tiny scenes, paint in places it shouldn’t be, and a camera roll full of questionable angles. What was meant to be a relaxing side project quickly turned into a chaotic love affair with mood, scale, and storytelling - one that shows no signs of slowing down.

How It All G~t Weird

I picked up my first miniature in 2022. What hooked me was the challenge - the tiny details, the precision, the focus it demanded. I spent hours refining every layer, every highlight, chasing that satisfying moment when the piece clicks. Eventually, painting alone wasn’t enough. I started building around the figures - creating scenes, moods, and moments. Dioramas became a way to push ideas further. To tell stories, not just decorate models.

By day, I’m a UX Lead Designer. It’s creative work, but this - painting and building - is where I get to follow my own instincts. No brief. No client. Just ideas, tools, and time. It’s quiet, focused, and endlessly rewarding.

Why I Started R~gue Brush

In October 2022, I gave this growing obsession a name: Rogue Brush.

It’s not a studio. It’s not a business plan. It’s the label I use for the creative work I care about most - miniature art that blends craft, atmosphere, and story. Some pieces are clean and crisp, others gritty and strange - but they all aim to make you stop, look, and feel something.

Thanks for being here. Hope you enjoy exploring these weird little worlds.

No templates. No repeats. No mass production.

Every diorama here is a one-off - built from scratch, shaped by mood, and never made twice. That’s the deal.

Each piece is its own weird little world, crafted with care, intent, and maybe too many drybrush layers.

It’s not about perfection - it’s about making something that feels real, strange, and yours.

That’s the Rogue Brush way.