Artwork by Edwins

Cracked & Composed: How Edwins Channels Chaos into Vision 

From hyperpop aesthetics to horror surrealism

Published on


Edwins is a modern-day maverick—equal parts hyperpop curator, meme linguist, fashion disruptor, and digital folk mythologist. His budding career began with TikTok chronicles of high school hallways, but quickly evolved into something stranger, weirder, and harder to pin down. After maxing out his creative reach on several social platforms, Edwins returned to a hybrid practice: remixing selfie culture, internet ephemera, and rapper collaborations into a style that feels as cracked as it is deliberate.

Working with tools like Superstudio, Edwins pushes his visual language even further. Whether distorting stoic selfies into uncanny lore or channeling vlog culture into magical realist avatars, his work blurs the line between personal myth and internet spectacle. “Kaiber feels impulsive, consistent,” he says. “The models help me capture my vision… from an open space to generate multiple video ideas simultaneously.”

At once DIY and distinctly post-genre, Edwins offers a template for the next wave of creators—where identity, humor, and horror fold into each other with aesthetic precision.

When did you first start creating, and how did your visual universe take shape?

I started creating in high-school. I would make TikToks around school, following stupid trends at the time—but I gained a very big following from it. I had a video where I was interviewing a classmate and it went viral super quick. After that I stopped doing social media for a while. The next year, I started a whole new page, called @orbitsarchive. That’s when I started doing slideshow posts on TikTok every day, eventually gaining around 400,000 followers on that page. Unfortunately the account got banned. That’s when I moved over to Instagram and started over from scratch.

Eventually, I started another TikTok account called Edwin Skeletrix, which was the username I’d used before, (when I worked with Edward Skeletrix). He put me on to everything I know about AI, and I just kept pushing from there to learn more.

Can you describe your creative approach to AI in three words?

Unpredictable, Whimsical, Grotesque.

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impulsive, new, consistent, I used the model to capture my vision by really using to its full potential by using its open space to generate multiple video ideas simultaneously it really is a great tool for ai use

How have you use ModelMaker in Superstudio to capture your vision? Did anything surprise you?

I use Superstudio as an open space to generate multiple video ideas simultaneously—it really is a great tool for AI. I was surprised at the website being super easy to use and very responsive.

Who or what are your biggest influences, and how do they show up in your art?

Some of my biggest influences are my brand partner @moshworkin (who also helps with some of the images on the page). Edward Skeletrix has influenced me tons as I said earlier, and another influence for me has been my friend burna, super creative guy who taught me a lot.

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What is the weirdest or most unexpected place you’ve found creative inspiration?

The weirdest place I found inspiration for something was from just my brain, I think of a lot of weird stuff and it just ends up working out.

What are you streaming lately?

Streaming? Does that mean watching?

Follow along with @edwins.online to see the growing lore and business he’s growing with Superstudio.

call me pubes the way Im above these dckheads
@edwins.online

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