
2015, ABOUT MY BEGINNINGSâŠ
It all started in Mexico, back in 2015, when I was browsing YouTube and began seeing videos of people making crafts with a type of clay I had never heard of. After lots of Googling, I found out it was called polymer clay, which hardens when baked. I was eager to create similar things and sell them, so I started researching what material would work best for meâthere was also the option of using cold porcelain. I chose polymer clay. I began saving to buy the materials and an oven and started diving deeper into the world of polymer clay. Channels like âEl Arte de Pau,â puddingfishcakes, polymomotea, and many others I canât recall were my teachers in what to do and not to do. So I spent my few savings (I was a student at the time) and began creating. It all started with coming up with a name. I didnât even know what I was going to make, so I created a Facebook page called âKibaliciusâ and sold pens decorated with clay. It wasnât a bad start, but I struggled because baking them often caused the pen bases to warp due to the heat, which led to material waste. Everything came crashing down after a commissionâif I remember correctly, it was a unicorn. It turned out well, and the delivery went perfectly (though I made no profit, as I spent everything on one-way transportation). A few days later, the client contacted me saying there was an issue with the pen and a part had broken. As I mentioned, I was losing more material due to the warping bases or broken clay. Thatâs when I gave up on my businessâvery sad and convinced I wasnât good enough. I kept watching clay creation videos, though my motivation was low, until about a year later. With the materials I still had, I decided to try again and even joined several clay groups to learn more. Thatâs when I realized that the clay I had bought wasnât suitable for fine detailsâit wasnât me or my process, it was the clay! With that in mind, I switched materials: I had been using Sculpey, but I moved to Premo, and things started to go much better. Kibalicius no longer existed as a page, and after someone said it sounded like food, I came up with a new name and page.
2015â2016, Welcome Moshi O
Whatâs a Moshi O? What does the name mean? Does the “O” stand for something? The truth isâitâs a made-up word with no meaning. All I knew was that I wanted to create little creatures called Moshis, which would be the âmascotsâ of my page. I made banners with these beings and started promoting myself in buy-and-sell groups. I had some sales and slowly started gaining followers. I even made an extra mascot, Sulli. But I never fully launched the world of the Moshis, and I wasnât confident about continuing with the name Moshi O. So I decided to take a full 180° turn: new name, logo, imageâeverything.

2016, MY SECOND CHANCE: XIREI
The same year I created Moshi O, it was replaced by Xirei, a name I gave meaning to: it comes from the Japanese word ăăă (kirei), meaning âprettyâ or âbeautiful.â I swapped the âkâ for an âxâ to match the first letter of my name. The meaning I gave it: the things I make are âbeautiful.â I also gave the logo a meaning: in the swirl of the wing is the kanji æ (te), meaning “hand,” referencing that I make handmade items. Pretty wild, right? Maybe I was high on something. With Xirei, I started promoting and selling even moreânot just clay items, but also embroidered, painted ones, and more materials and ideas. I was trying to build a brand, and although I wasnât selling a lot yet, I even made my own lightbox for photos before upgrading to one with LED lights. My packaging was handmade too; I made stamps and printed them on Kraft paper bags I crafted myself! Eventually, I realized it took too much time, so I started buying some things pre-made to save effort.

I created new characters as mascots: Satsu with pink hair, Lua with dark hair, and Yani with green hair. They often appeared in announcements and banners. My themes reflected the things I lovedâanime, movies, cartoons

One of the most exciting things with Xirei was going to craft fairs. The first was in July 2016 at an event called Kawaii Fest. It was my first time, so I had to buy a tablecloth and small furniture to make my display less flat. I was very nervousânot knowing if people would like my creations. But by then, I already had a few supporters who came just to buy from me, and Iâm so grateful for that support! The outcome wasnât great, but I at least covered the table cost and made a small profit. Oh, and I didnât mention if I was still having problems with clayâwell, no! I started earning enough to buy higher-quality clay (I love you, Fimo), and with that, I made my first doll necklaces, inspired by creations from angeniacreations (angenia_wolf).

I also launched my Etsy shop (back when it was cool), and sold to many places in the U.S. and Europe. Slowly but surely, I was making progress compared to when I doubted myself so much. Two years later, I decided to redesign the Xirei logo since it felt outdated. I kept the same elements but refreshed it, dividing one line of the X in two to symbolize it as the second version. Another year passed, and I grew a little more, until I entered a new worldâŠ
A few covers


2019, HELLO, JELOU XIANI
Iâve always drawn, using leftover office paper from my momâs workâpencils, markers, watercolors (even if the paper couldn’t handle much water). As I watched others sell their illustrationsâfanart or originalâI asked myself: Why not? Thatâs how “jelouxiani” took its first steps. I decided to incorporate illustrated products into my brand, especially original art and some fanart. And so the era of Xirei ended and transitioned to âjelou xiani.â I just wanted to be myself, showing a new side and new products. I wanted a simple nameânot overly complicated. I also wanted to be known by my real name. “Jelouxiani” was the pick. Xiani is the artistic nickname I chose, based on my real name, Xiadani. âJelouâ was just a playful version of âhello,â adding a comedic twist. Since I wanted my creations to travel the world, I thought a touch of English wouldnât hurt, but not too English, you know?


2022, CROSSING THE RAINBOW
With just a year of existence, jelouxiani had already gone through many changes, lacking consistencyâexcept for the image of my dog, Kiba. Kiba was a 12-year-old Chow Chow. She arrived in 2012 for my birthday. She was my companion through everything, and itâs uncanny how much we resembled each otherâin temperament and behavior, like two peas in a pod. On New Yearâs heading into 2023, I sadly remember that Kiba passed away in the early morning of January 1st. She suffered gastric torsion, and though she underwent surgery, her little heart couldnât take it.

2023, THE FINAL FORM?
After that, I decided I wanted to keep her aliveâthrough my art. On January 13, I officially made her the main image of my brand and logo like mokopuni.arts, I started drawing her everywhere I could. Sheâll always be here, in my art, in my heart, and now among the starsâa guardian watching over us.

2024, FINAL… WITH CHANGES
In 2024, I made another change: replacing the last âiâ in “xiani” with scissors to symbolize handmade. The X now includes the wing from Xirei and the kanji æ (hand). The main brand color became blue, with icons like clouds, stars, moons, and hearts. Secondary colors: pastel pink, purple, and yellow. I also started expanding into something more: I collect anime figures (my obsession), so I began exploring faceplate customizationâspecifically for nendoroids. Then came another big life change.
LOVE AND MOVED


2025, DONâT GET STUCK!
Now Iâm here, writing a post on my page about the story of my brand. I tried to summarize it, so I think whatâs here are the most important parts. Thanks to everyone who read all the way throughâendless gratitude. Weâre almost halfway through the year, so itâs time to push forward again.
This is the story of a small brand thatâs not just made by me, Xiani, but also by all the people whoâve supported me along the way.
To everyone who ever bought something, to my family who supported meâeven if they didnât know what the characters were. To my husband.
But especially to my mom, who has always stood by me through every failure, every time I wanted to quit. She supported me patientlyâeven helping buy expensive machines.
I know the best way to repay her is to bring back everything Iâve created and keep it alive.
I donât want to disappoint herâor myself.
Even when itâs hard, Iâm working to bring forward what was once âjelou xianiâ (Xirei).