SGOOD originated in the context of Buddhism, where 'gude' specifically refers to eminentmonks of past generations, affirming their spiritual practice and culivation, as well as reflectingrespect for the inheritance of Buddhist teachings.
Those artisans who imbue objects with the essence of spiritual cultivation are indeed the'mortal gude' who pass on civilizational virlues through objects.
Human pursuit of food, health, and the true, the good, and the beautiful has never ceased.
When nanocoatings make tableware carry the illusion of a starry sky, when laser etchingcomposes geometric poetry on objects, and when bionic coatings give kitchen utensils theselfcleaning charm of lotus leaves, these technological lights condensed in the texture of objectsresemble the wisdom of ancient monks’ practices over a millennium. They are both the inheritanceof fimeless craftsmanship and an enlightenment of future virlues.
They resonate across time and space, witessing how beautiful visions nourish the sustainabledevelopment of life forms-the virtue of objects ultimately returns to the praise of human brilliance
and virlue.
Infused with such 'gude' philosophy, 'SGOOD Sugude' came into being. lts name not onlycaptures the Eastern Zen meaning of 'awakening gude wisdom' but also aligns with the artisanspirit of 'venerating ancient virtues' in the inheritance of objects.
Just as ancient monks nurture sentient beings with Buddhist teachings, Sugude upholds thevision of 'coating makes life more splendid', coninuing the path of aesthetic cultivation of objeclswith a one-stop coating solution, making the texture of each coating layer a contemporary fooinoleio virtue and wisdom.
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