Chiasa Aonuma School Girl -
The box is immediately striking: a large window box with soft pastel pinks and whites, featuring Takeda Hiromitsu’s original illustration of Chiasa on the front. Inside, the figure is cocooned in blister plastic with moderate protection—adequate but not excessive. You’ll find:
Unboxing feels premium but not lavish. The illustration on the box is almost worth keeping on its own—classic, soft-focused, nostalgic.
Where this figure truly shines is the sculpt. Chiasa is portrayed standing at a slight contrapposto, one hand lightly gripping the hem of her skirt, the other behind her back or holding a book bag. Her pose is demure yet provocative—that delicate balance between innocence and awareness that defines the “school girl” trope in adult-oriented collectibles. chiasa aonuma school girl
Key sculpt details:
Proportions: Chiasa is tall for a schoolgirl figure—elegant, not loli. Her bust is modest but shapely, waist narrow, hips curved. This is a young adult body, not a child’s. That distinction is crucial for collectors who appreciate the “older teen” aesthetic without veering into uncomfortable territory. The box is immediately striking: a large window
This is a scaled figure, not an action figure. No articulation. However, the interchangeable parts (if included) are a nice touch. The alternative faceplate might show a slight blush or a more open mouth. Swapping is easy—the pegs are sturdy, and the seamline hides under the bangs.
Warning: The hand gripping the skirt is fragile. Several owners have reported snapping the fingers during part swaps. Heat the part with a hairdryer before removal if needed. Unboxing feels premium but not lavish
Unlike characters from mainstream anime or video games, Chiasa Aonuma is an original character (OC) designed by a specific illustrator—most notably by artist Takeda Hiromitsu or associated with the G-taste/School Girl series lineage. She exists in that dreamy, hyper-stylized space of Japanese pin-up and figure art: a “school girl” not necessarily by narrative context, but as an archetype. The “Chiasa Aonuma School Girl” figure is typically a 1/6 or 1/7 scale PVC/ABS figure depicting a tall, slender, dark-haired girl in a modified seifuku (sailor-style school uniform).
This review is based on the common traits across her known releases, with emphasis on the most widespread version (e.g., the Daiki Kōgyō release, circa 2016–2019).