DJI is doing something a little different with its latest audio gear, releasing a set of magnetic front caps for the new DJI Mic Mini 2 and turning a tiny wireless microphone into something that feels more personal than purely practical. According to DJI, the new “Time” series launched on April 22 and marks the company’s first artist collaboration for a microphone accessory, created with illustrator Victo Ngai. That makes this less of a routine accessory drop and more of a statement about where creator gear is heading – toward products that are meant to be seen, not just used.
DJI says the idea behind the release is to bring art into everyday audio tools, giving users another way to match their setup to their mood, outfit, or on-camera style. The company built the collection around four designs called Dawn, Soaring Green, Blazing Glory, and Refined Gold, with each one representing a different stage of life and a different kind of creative energy. In plain terms, DJI is treating the mic like part of the creator’s look, not just a clip-on box that disappears into a shirt collar.
That creative angle gets more interesting once you look at the artist behind it. The One Club for Creativity describes Victo Ngai as a Forbes honoree, Hamilton King Award winner, and Society of Illustrators New York Gold Medalist, which helps explain why DJI is presenting this as a real crossover project rather than a simple color refresh. DJI says Ngai approached the Mic Mini 2 as a miniature canvas and wanted the artwork to feel alive in everyday use, which fits the broader pitch that the microphone can double as a small piece of wearable design.

The timing also matters. DJI’s media center shows that the Mic Mini 2 itself was announced on April 21, just a day before the magnetic cap reveal, while DJI’s global site was teasing a “More Than Sound” launch for April 28 at 12 pm GMT, suggesting the company was rolling out the product story in stages. That kind of rollout makes sense for a product aimed at creators, because the pitch is clearly bigger than specs alone.
Still, the Mic Mini 2 is not being sold on looks alone. DJI says the microphone supports 48kHz/24-bit high-definition recording and mixing, includes three built-in sound presets, and can connect directly to the DJI Osmo Audio ecosystem, all while staying lightweight and portable.
Price will probably decide how people feel about the accessory. DJI says the artist collaboration Time series magnetic front caps cost 199 yuan, while Mic Mini 2 bundles start at 329 yuan, and the company is also offering eight additional colorful front caps beyond the artist edition. That pricing puts the design add-on in impulse-buy territory for fans who already want the microphone, even if it may feel optional for buyers who only care about clean audio capture.
What stands out most here is that DJI seems to understand how creator tech is used now. A clip-on microphone is no longer always hidden off camera, and for vloggers, streamers, mobile journalists, and short-form video makers, a visible mic can become part of the visual identity of the content itself. With the Mic Mini 2 and these magnetic front caps, DJI is betting that even a small audio accessory can carry a bit of personality, and that may end up being the smartest part of the whole launch.
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