If your brand looks one way
in a PDF and another way
on the shop floor, it’s not working.
We define specs for every touchpoint — so your brand feels precise, intentional, and built to scale.
The brand doesn’t scale properly.
What works inside the team gets lost in documents.
No guidelines —
no consistency.
Each department improvises.
The brand falls apart.
Design doesn’t explain
the product.
Complex solutions need clarity, not gloss.
Nothing stands out at first glance.
No visual anchors — everything looks the same.
Not every product needs the same level of depth.
Pricing reflects complexity, asset count, and rollout — not fluff.
What impressed me most was how Toimi combined design sense with technical detail. Every idea was backed up by reasoning, and they weren't afraid to challenge us if it meant a stronger outcome.
We had a pretty complex setup request. They broke it down, kept us updated at every step, and delivered earlier than we thought possible.
Clear process, fast approvals, no drama. Exactly how a project should run.
We'll definitely continue working together.
Didn’t find what you were looking for? Drop us a line at info@toimi.pro.
Cost depends on project complexity, scope, and timeline — a full product design cycle covering research, concept development, 3D modeling, and prototype-ready documentation requires significantly more work than a cosmetic redesign of an existing form. The number of components, materials involved, manufacturing constraints, and whether physical prototyping is included all shape the final scope. Exact pricing is discussed individually after reviewing your project brief.
League City sits within one of the most technically demanding industrial corridors on the Gulf Coast — aerospace and defense companies near Johnson Space Center regularly need hardware enclosures, operator interface panels, and equipment housings designed for precision manufacturing and compliance with aerospace standards. Maritime engineering firms along Galveston Bay commission industrial design for vessel equipment, deck hardware, and operator workstation layouts designed for marine environments. The broader Clear Lake and Webster area also has a base of consumer and commercial product companies serving the Greater Houston market that commission industrial design for retail product lines and branded equipment.
Timeline depends on project phase — concept development alone moves faster than a full cycle covering 3D modeling, material specification, and production-ready technical drawings. Projects requiring physical prototyping add further time depending on fabrication method and iteration cycles. Exact timelines are confirmed after your League City project brief is reviewed and the full scope of deliverables is defined before work begins.
Industrial design focuses on the form, usability, and user interaction of a physical product — how it looks, how it feels to operate, and how it communicates function and brand through its physical presence. Product engineering focuses on how it works mechanically and structurally — materials science, load calculations, and manufacturing tolerances. For League City clients developing aerospace hardware or marine equipment, the two disciplines overlap significantly — we design with manufacturing constraints, environmental exposure requirements, and engineering parameters in mind from the start rather than producing a design that engineering then has to make manufacturable.
Yes — final deliverables can include production-ready 3D files in formats compatible with your manufacturing partner's CAD environment, technical drawings with tolerances and material specifications, surface finish callouts, and assembly documentation. For League City clients working with Houston metro area manufacturers or Gulf Coast fabrication facilities, we structure the handoff package to match what your specific production partner requires. Manufacturing handoff scope and file format requirements are confirmed during the project brief phase before design work begins.
Aerospace and marine applications impose specific design constraints that consumer or commercial product design does not — vibration resistance, thermal cycling, corrosion from salt air and chemical exposure, ingress protection ratings, and compliance with relevant industry standards all shape material and form decisions from the earliest concept stage. For League City clients near Johnson Space Center or along the Galveston Bay maritime corridor, environmental operating conditions and applicable standards are documented during the discovery phase and treated as hard design constraints rather than considerations addressed after the aesthetic direction is set.
We begin with a discovery session covering the product's function, target user, operating environment, manufacturing constraints, and any existing technical documentation — drawings, failed prototypes, or competitive products that define the design space. League City clients typically provide engineering context about operating conditions and existing component interfaces while we handle design development, 3D modeling, and documentation. Review rounds are structured so your engineering and operations teams validate each design stage before we proceed to the next level of detail.
Final delivery includes 3D model files in agreed formats, rendered visuals for presentation or marketing use, and technical documentation appropriate to the project phase — concept renders for early-stage clients, production-ready drawings for those moving directly to fabrication. For League City clients in aerospace or maritime applications where documentation standards are defined by the project's compliance requirements, we structure deliverables to meet those standards. Exact deliverables and file ownership are confirmed in the project contract before work begins.