Why Fuzzi Dice?

It started as a small boy...
At the age of 11, I got my first set of fuzzy dice from a hot rod enthusiast whose daughter lived across the street from my family. He would always come by either before or after going to car shows and I loved the dice hanging from his mirror. As he gave me a set of my own, he told me I could hang them in my car some day. Today, that set sits in my 1965 Ford Falcon, which I bought from his adult daughter when I was 12. It was his grandmother’s car. Thanks to Optima Batteries and a host of other partners, he got to see it debut – fully re-imagined years later at SEMA ’23. My father and I spent 6 years on that car, flipping multiple in the process to fund the project. All got fuzzy dice.
At the age of 16, my sister and I co-founded a media company. We originally focused on animated explainer videos for government clients and have more recently expanded to include social media and how-to videos on the modifications I’ve made on my vehicles.
Fast forward to today, and I’ve curated an eclectic inventory of projects that I look forward to seeing come to fruition in the years ahead. I recently completed my 2015 Porsche Cayenne S Overland build, placed with Warn Industries for SEMA 2024, after an extensive summer of touring the west coast Overland and Offroad Expo circuit. For over 4 months, I put thousands of road miles on the Cayenne, again with fuzzy dice hanging from the rear view mirror.
I just recently acquired my largest blank canvas yet – a 1963 Ford Econoline Van. It came with a 302 V8 core and a pair of ’72 Dodge 4×4 Dana 44’s. I got it all for only $900.
Also recently relocated to Idaho are a 1937 Graham 2-door coupe and a 1955 F100 Panel. Started literally 30 years ago by my grandfather (when his son, my father, was my age) these projects come to me by way of a barter deal, allowing me to revive and re-imagine two concepts grandpa has long since given up on.
Collectively, these vehicles represent several years of potential product placements, show appearances, social media content, and the inception of Fuzzy Dice Concepts . I appreciate your consideration and would love to work with your company to bring visibility to your products, both today and well into the future.
Time-proven Values
Call Us Old-fashioned...
Both in what we produce and what we use to produce it, quality is something you can’t fake. We want our projects to look and feel “right”, and to do that, you can’t cut corners.
Letting your “yes” be “Yes!”. Being on time. Making the deadline. I appreciate the opportunity so many have given me, and maintaining a reputation as a partner people want to have is important to my future success.
Cookie cutter production has its place, but doing things a little different, taking a new angle on a concept, that’s where its at for me. I like the word “bespoke”. It even sounds cool.
I want my life – and my creations – to reflect who I am or who my client is in a way they maybe hadn’t imagined, yet one that “feels familiar” nonetheless.
I’ve never been one to follow the trend. I prefer to either set them or stretch them. Following a trail someone blazed is great for learning a process, and we all need that learning continually – but then the fun happens. You have to take what you’ve learned, and put your special sauce to it to see where YOU can go.
