Sorry
Stephan Dybus
Sorry , 2024
Digital sculpture
© Stephan Dybus, 2024
In Stephan Dybus’s plasticine universe, everything looks a little too handmade to lie. This still from a 3D animation shows a soft clay figure buzzing the word “SORRY” into its own forehead, a gesture so over the top it loops back from absurdity into earnesty. It’s built for the apologies that require the extra mile, when a simple text won’t cut it and you need to demonstrate remorse with the subtlety of a sledgehammer.
Stephan Dybus
Sorry , 2024
Digital sculpture
© Stephan Dybus, 2024
In Stephan Dybus’s plasticine universe, everything looks a little too handmade to lie. This still from a 3D animation shows a soft clay figure buzzing the word “SORRY” into its own forehead, a gesture so over the top it loops back from absurdity into earnesty. It’s built for the apologies that require the extra mile, when a simple text won’t cut it and you need to demonstrate remorse with the subtlety of a sledgehammer.
From the people who send them
The handwriting doesn't look printed. My mom asked if I'd written it myself. I said yes.
— Blake, LA
Arrived in four days. I'd braced for longer.
— Ian, Chicago
Sent it to a friend I hadn't seen since college. He sent me a photo of it on his side table a week later.
— Dave, Philly
My wife sent it to me on a random Tuesday. No occasion. That was the point.
— Eddie, Tampa
Kept it on my shelf next to my books. Doesn't look out of place. That's the highest compliment I can give a card.
Chelsey, New York
My little brother graduated in May. I live across the country. This was the closest I could get to being there.
— Jared, Chicago
Put one in every welcome bag for a networking event I hosted. Got emails afterward asking how I'd handwritten them all. I told them my secret.
- Carly, Ft. Lauderdale
How It Works
Select
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Write
Type your message. We handwrite it.
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Select
Pick your artwork.
Write
Type your message. We handwrite it.
Add the address. We mail it.