This piece is clearly aimed at a specific collector: the one who appreciates process over product. It doesn't celebrate the final, polished version of Yui Ichigo; it celebrates the blueprint , the initial spark, the raw artist's hand before commercialization smooths it out.
In the sprawling ecosystem of character collectibles, standard releases and "special editions" often blur together. True distinction is rare. However, every so often, a piece emerges that forces collectors to pause and re-evaluate what a "variant" can be. The Yui Ichigo -10- - ART Edition -CPD-005- is precisely that anomaly. Yui Ichigo -10- - ART Edition -CPD-005-
Owning the feels less like owning a statue of a character and more like owning a signed production cel from an anime that was never made. It is a deconstructionist’s trophy. Rarity and Market Reception Released in extremely limited quantities (reports suggest fewer than 150 units globally), the ART Edition was initially met with confusion. Pre-orders for the standard CPD-005 sold out in hours. The ART Edition lingered. This piece is clearly aimed at a specific
But as with many avant-garde collectibles, perception shifted. Once in-hand photos surfaced—showing how the monochrome palette plays with dramatic lighting, or how the "sketch lines" disappear and reappear depending on the viewing angle—demand spiked. True distinction is rare
The standard CPD-005 release was a masterpiece of sculpting, featuring dynamic flow and a pastel palette. But the is something else entirely. The "ART Edition" Difference: Deconstructing the Monochrome At first glance, the ART Edition is jarring. Instead of the soft pinks, whites, and strawberry reds of the original, this figure is rendered almost entirely in shades of gray, off-white, and matte black , with a single, restrained pop of color—often a muted crimson in the eyes or a specific accessory.
Released under the enigmatic CPD series (widely believed by collectors to stand for "Concept Project Design" or "Creative Print Division"), this piece takes a familiar subject—the fan-favorite original character Yui Ichigo in her "-10-" iteration—and transforms it into a meta-commentary on the nature of figure collecting itself. For the uninitiated, Yui Ichigo (a name blending the Japanese words for "only one" and "strawberry") is a muse character popular in indie art and garage kit circuits. The "-10-" suffix refers to a specific age-up design: a more mature, slightly world-weary depiction of the character, often associated with limited-run resin kits celebrating a decade of the artist's work.