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Junlin Sun, a designer from Shanghai and a student at Parsons School of Design in New York, builds her work around one enduring fascination: transformation. Her earliest inspiration came from a childhood moment on Mount Putuo, where she found a butterfly with a broken wing — delicate, wounded, yet still full of quiet strength. That image stayed with her.

Growing up, Junlin explored making by hand in every form she could reach. She experimented with PLA using a 3D-printing pen, shaped metal through soldering, crafted angel-wing headpieces from paper clay, and collected miniature objects and butterfly specimens to study their structures. These early creations became the foundation of her design language — intricate, spiritual, and always in motion.
WooduFly is the continuation of that journey. Each piece is handcrafted with intention, blending metal, crystals, and organic forms to reflect both vulnerability and resilience. Junlin’s designs are more than jewelry; they are small talismans of metamorphosis, made for people who are constantly evolving.