Maid For You Velvet
$299.00
Character: Goddess of Victory: Nikke · Velvet
Product Status: Pre-Order · Estimated to ship Q3 - 2026
Rewards: Earn 2,990 Crystals With This Purchase. Learn More
Shipping: Billed after arrival based on packed size and destination. Learn More
ABOUT
1680 Studio’s Maid For You Velvet captures the former special agent maid mid-shift — order clipboard in one hand, mallet raised in the other — rendered at 1/4 scale in imported resin and PU. The sculpt earns its footprint through layered detail work: butterfly-motif rope lacework across the bodice, a full floral tattoo climbing the thigh rendered through semi-translucent hosiery, and a cafe diorama base that grounds the figure in its setting. At this scale, those surface details read from across the shelf, not just up close.
INFORMATION
INFORMATION
Dimensions
- Not specified
Configurations
- Scale: 1/4
- Studio: 1680 Studio
- Included accessories visible from images: Order clipboard, mallet prop, cafe side table with dessert display, round wooden-finish diorama base
Material & Packaging
- Material: Imported resin and imported PU (polyurethane; a flexible casting material often used alongside resin for parts requiring durability or softness)
- Packaging: Illustrated color box, EPE Foam (dense protective foam used for statue shipping), kraft paper outer box
Other
- Estimated Shipment: Q3 2026
VIDEO
CHARACTER ORIGIN
SCENE NOTES
The pose locks onto Velvet’s debut chapter in the Fatal Maid story event — despite officially joining Maid For You, Velvet struggles to fully settle into life at the Maid Cafe, and that friction is exactly what the figure plays into. As an out-and-out hedonist who doesn’t overthink life and simply follows whatever piques her interest, she does not take the job seriously — and 1680 Studio leans directly into that energy: the grin is wide and unguarded, the mallet is raised with zero professional restraint, and the clipboard feels more like a prop she’s tolerating than a tool she’s using. The studio’s sculptural focus falls on the tension between the refined costume detailing — gold-trimmed butterfly lacework, frilled apron, cherry blossom hair ornament — and the deliberately chaotic attitude of the figure wearing it, making the contrast the visual punchline of the whole piece.





