You might have seen Suzhou Gardens drawn on Xuan Paper or embroidered on silk, but have you ever seen them carved and marked on stainless steel?

Ultrafast laser black marking creates three scenes: window lattices, waterside pavilions, and pagoda reflections, while the hinges made by precision cutting can bend freely.

First Fold: Thirty-six mandarine duck Hall
On the mirror stainless steel plate, the window lattices of the Thirty-Six Mandarin Duck Hall are cut through, leaving blank spaces to form picture frames. The edges of the lattice patterns are free of slag, taper, and heat-affected zones, achieving a precision of 1 μm.

Second Fold: Waterside Pavillion
Light and shadow pass through the hollowed-out screen, making the water surface seem to glisten with ripples. Lotus leaves rise in the breeze, butterfly wings flutter — this is not a painting, but a laser marking on metal

Third Fold: North Temple Pagoda
The Humble Administrator's Garden ingeniously borrows the North Temple Pagoda, located northwest outside the garden, into its own scenery — standing in the pavilion, one can see the towering pagoda, cleverly compensating for the inability to build a pagoda within a private garden and adding a profound charm.

Technical Highlight: Hinge Cutting
No solder joints, no riveting, no foreign material involvement.
