Dwarf Factory’s Hyper-real 4/20 Resin Keycaps Are Handcrafted Miniature Gardens You Can Type On

The countdown to 4/20 has begun, and if you’re the type who celebrates by upgrading your workspace aesthetics rather than raiding the nearest dispensary, Dwarf Factory sees you. The Vietnamese artisan keycap maker has built a reputation for encasing impossibly detailed miniature scenes in resin, transforming individual keyboard keys into tiny dioramas. Their Terrarium V2 collection has featured everything from succulents to seasonal florals, each one hand-painted and assembled at a scale that borders on obsessive. Their latest drop leans into the holiday with zero subtlety and maximum craft.

Rasta Jardin swaps the usual botanical lineup for miniature ‘ahem’ plants, complete with serrated leaves, decorative baskets, and what looks like actual soil composition at microscopic scale. Each keycap gets hand-painted, which means every Rasta Jardin has slight variations in how the leaves angle, how the rocks settle, how the light catches the resin dome. Standing 16mm tall in SA profile and compatible with Cherry MX switches, these caps are designed for your top row function keys or Escape, where they can sit pretty without making your fingers work harder to reach them.
Designer: Dwarf Factory

Designer: Dwarf Factory

The Rasta Jardin construction starts with hand-assembled miniature plant elements, built at a scale where individual leaf serrations actually matter. The plants get positioned inside tiny woven baskets, the kind of detail that requires steady hands and magnification. Substrate gets added at the base, rocks get arranged for visual balance, and then the entire assembly gets encased in layers of transparent resin, cast in a way that avoids bubbles and maintains optical clarity.

Dwarf Factory’s command over resin is truly impressive (go check out their other work too). The dome shape creates a lens effect, magnifying the scene inside while also playing with light refraction depending on your viewing angle. Sit directly above your keyboard and you see one composition. Lean back slightly and the light shifts, catching different facets of the leaves and basket weave. The transparency means RGB backlighting (if your board has it) will glow through the keycap, turning the whole thing into a tiny illuminated terrarium when you’re typing in the dark.

The hand-painting step happens after the resin casting, adding color gradients to the leaves that give them depth and realism. The plants have a specific visual language, those jagged leaf edges and the way the foliage clusters around the stem, and Dwarf Factory nails it at a scale where most makers would just paint a green blob and call it done. The baskets get individual weave lines. The soil gets color variation. Even the rocks have shadows and highlights that suggest three-dimensional form rather than flat decoration.

Dwarf Factory ships each Rasta Jardin in a sliding kraft paper box with rubber finger gloves, because resin surfaces and fingerprint oils are enemies. You also get a user guide, which feels almost comically formal for a single keycap but reinforces the idea that you’re buying a miniature art piece that happens to be functional. At roughly $73, pricing sits in line with other premium artisan caps from established makers. You’re paying for the labor-intensive handwork and the design execution that makes these feel like gallery-quality miniatures rather than novelty garbage.

What makes the Rasta Jardin compelling is how it treats the 420 aesthetic with the same design rigor Dwarf Factory applies to cherry blossoms or desert flora. There’s no cartoonish stoner imagery here, no neon green gimmicks or Rastafarian color blocking that screams cheap novelty. Just meticulous botanical miniaturization that happens to feature a plant with significant cultural weight. Your productivity won’t improve, but your keyboard will have a story worth telling when Monday rolls around and someone asks what the hell is on your Escape key.