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May 10 2012
Awesome Video Of A First Print
Okay, I’m not the only one getting truly excellent first prints out of The Replicator. Check this video from Teehan+Lax Labs in Toronto. This bust looked great right after they took the support material off, but beautiful after some quick finishing.
Design firms, you’re on notice. This is how it’s done.
Click here to view the embedded video.
Also, what are these gears for, guys?! So glad you’re off and running.
Printing gears off the @makerbot for our next project – bit.ly/KpJ9yN
— Teehan+Lax Labs (@tllabs) May 10, 2012
Why Makers Make Less Trash
Yesterday’s New York Times had an interesting piece about a group of people in Amsterdam who help people fix things instead of throw them out; like an old iron that doesn’t steam or a skirt with a hole in it.
Founder of the Repair Cafe, Martine Postma:
“In Europe, we throw out so many things,” said Martine Postma, a former journalist who came up with the concept after the birth of her second child led her to think more about the environment. “It’s a shame, because the things we throw away are usually not that broken. There are more and more people in the world, and we can’t keep handling things the way we do.”
Exactly! This is how Makers see the world. Sure, something breaks, but that doesn’t mean it’s ready for the trash can. Look at all the things that have been saved with the mindset that Ms. Postma talks about:
Thingiverse user Renosis saved a family member’s beloved wrist watch by making a replacement for the lost battery cover. He wrote, “I don’t expect anyone has the same watch and if they do, I wouldn’t expect that they lost the back to it. This is more of a proof of concept. I wanted to post it because I was so amazed that it worked and hopefully, it will inspire someone else to use this temporary fix one day if their watch breaks.”
rbckman made a replacement lock mechanism for his buddy’s dishwasher. The manufacturer of the dishwasher wasn’t shipping that part anymore, so they either had to fix it with a custom part or throw out the dishwasher. The choice is clear!
lazlo‘s blender broke, and the solution was to simply make a new gear. Why throw out an almost perfectly good blender? Good as new.
The other day, Brendan Dawes saved a mop from going to the garbage by just making a couple new clips.
Annelise talked about her own fix to the drain plug in her kitchen sink. If you don’t have a handle to remove that plug, it’s gotta go. That handle broke, so she just made a new one, and avoided a trip to Home Depot.
Even better: these are all available for free for anyone! Sometimes people wonder, “why should I make more stuff out of plastic?” But a lot of times it’s more about the waste you’re not creating by keeping old things in good condition!
What have you revitalized with a MakerBot?
May 03 2012
Calendar Update: MakerBot Education @ Tekserve
There’s one week left to sign up for our third class in the “How to MakerBot” series at Tekserve in Manhattan. Liz Arum, our education specialist, will be leading the class.
This class is focused on the program modeling program Blender. In order to participate, those attending the class should take some time to download the following programs before class:
And then you should bring that computer, a 3-button mouse, and a desire to learn some awesome stuff about 3D modeling and MakerBotting!
RSVP now to reserve your spot! You can view the invitation here.
Tekserve – Seminar Room
119 W 23rd Street
NY, NY 10011
212-929-3645
Thursday, May 10; 6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
1928 Mickey Mouse Sketches
I wonder if someone could take these early sketches and derive some early-Mickey inspired 3D models. Notice that I say inspired, eh? Doesn’t that tail look perfectly suited for a small length of extruded ABS?
via Flavorwire
iPad Modeling –> Replicator Workflow
Thingiverse just featured this incredible MakerBotted model of a root structure. Thingiverse user TSDF used the iPad app iDough to model the shape above. I can’t explain the coolness any better than he did.
25 years after art school, 22 years after learning CAD, and 10 years after learning gcode, I would have never conceived that it would be possible to model complex organic geometry on a handheld device and hold a physical output in my hand 90 minutes later at such a low cost.
The app is $6.99 but holy moly does this look well worth it. It has brushes to “push, pull, smooth, move, pinch, spread, [and] flatten” your virtual clay. You can export your .obj from the app (email it from your iPad to your computer, says TSDF), and convert to an .stl in Netfab.
Here’s the final printed part:
Your Mom Made You – Make Her a Flower!

Mother’s Day: Say It With Flowers
Mother’s Day is fast approaching and MakerBot wants you to say it with flowers — 3D printed flowers!
Mother Nature has decorated our planet with an endless variety of flowers, trees, ferns, and vines. Let’s model some original, printable flowers for the awesome Mamas in our lives– maybe even some that can sing, dance, or squirt water in her face — and share them on Thingiverse.com!
We’ve asked our own Mothers to *pick* their favorites, so c’mon, MakerBotters! Let’s make ‘em proud.
How to Participate
- Create a flower design and share it to Thingiverse.com with a Public Domain or Creative Common license.
- Tag your flower design : “thanks mom!“
- Submit your entry by 11:59 pm. EST on May 10th, 2012
- Our jury of MakerBot Moms will review the submitted work and pick their top 5 favorites.
- We’ll announce winners and send out some swag!
At MakerBot, we love new designs, but we also love to see existing designs printed beautifully on a MakerBot 3D printer — so in addition to the design competition, we are offering a number of as-of-yet unannounced prizes to anyone who
A Few Good Flowers — Some Inspiration
Looking for some inspiration? We have also assembled a quick-and-dirty playlist of favorite flowers from Thingiverse below.
And, just because:
May 02 2012
Autodesk’s Inventor Fusion Preview Available For Windows And Mac
From Fabbaloo:
Autodesk is previewing its Inventor Fusion software, which “unites direct and parametric workflows within a single digital model created in Autodesk Inventor.”
Here are the updates touted in the press release:
Surfacing support! Users can now work seamlessly between solids and surfaces, expanding their confidence and capabilities to tackle design changes. By enhancing the existing translators to read surface data and adding new Parasolid, Rhino, IGES and AliasDesign .wire file import capabilities user have access to an even larger number of design formats.
Simplification wizard. Simulation users now have one button simplification of designs. This makes simplifying common geometry fast and easy and ensures that mesh and solves times are as fast as possible.
Ease of use improvements. New marking menus, sketch ease of use and modeling ease of use, make this release of Inventor Fusion the easiest to use yet. Did we mention it was easy?
Well that sounds fun. I downloaded Inventor Fusion for myself, and there’s just a brief questionnaire to fill out beforehand. If you’re looking for a great 3D modeling option, give it a try. But act now, since the previews will expire.
– The Microsoft Windows compatible technology preview executable expires on April 1, 2013.
– The Apple OS X compatible version of the technology preview expires on January 1, 2013.
Hey Mac users, see that? You can use this Autodesk program!
April 30 2012
A Randomized Ceiling Concept, From Digital To Tangible
I’ve blogged about Matt Compeau before, the guy making the coral-like prints on his Replicator (speaking of, maybe someone should print this and put it in an aquarium, as my colleague MakerBlock suggested).
His latest post at Emergent Forms shows us how he delivered a “randomized” ceiling for a client.
The piece above was printed, presumably on The Replicator, to show how the same section of segmented wood baffles would piece together to give a random looking solution. Each of these represents a 2′x8′ portion of ceiling, and Matt shows how those sections themselves are laid out in a way that will maximize the look of randomness.
Go to the original post to play with the web-based tool he devised to demonstrate the process to the client. Fun stuff.
This post reminds me of Kacie Hultgren, aka PrettySmallThings, in that she and Matt both use their MakerBot Replicators and/or TOM’s to demonstrate final products to clients. Did you see Kacie’s post over the weekend about how to work in scale? It was the first in a series that she’s put together for us, and the next one is pretty tops, too. Look for that on Friday.
Do you use MakerBotted scale models to communicate your ideas? Tell me about it.
April 26 2012
Paper Modelling
The recent news of a process for creating balloons of any shape using 3D printed molds and sophisticated balloon deflating modelling, reminded me of two really cool ways for creating paper models.
First is TreeMaker by Robert Lang, an engineer and world-renowned origami master. Lang’s free and open source program lets the user specify the number and ratio of major “flaps” and it designs a base that should collapse into a model with that number and ratio of flaps. When folding an octopus, one uses a base with 9 flaps – 8 equal flaps for the eight legs and 1 shorter flap that forms the head. A giraffe would probably use five really long flaps (for the legs and neck) and one very short one (for the tail).
The second is a type of software that assists with creating papercraft models by exploding a 3D model into a flat pattern that, when cut out and assembled using glue and tabs, would create a physical paper version of the 3D model. There are several different programs that do this, but I’m not aware of any that are free or open source. 1
If you know of any versions that are either free or open source – please share!
- The wikipedia article provides several suggestions and links if you’re interested.
April 23 2012
Sketch Or SketchUp, A Summary
There was a really nice set of responses to a post last week about sketching. Basically, I asked whether blog readers and MakerBot operators were accustomed to sketching their designs from the very beginning or using CAD tools to 3D model a design from the get go.
I just thought the responses deserved a quick recap, especially because they underscore the point that there is no right answer. As someone who jumped into this company with no background in 3D printing or any other hardware hacking, I have been continually surprised how accessible the concepts are. I think it’s nice to point out that those of you who do such great work all also have varying processes — so the results aren’t just individualized, the process is too.
The star of today’s episode of MakerBot TV, Kacie Hultgren (aka PrettySmallThings), said that the sketching stage is often absent from her work; not because she eschews pencil and paper, but because much of what she does comes from photographs. It’s pre-sketched, in a way.
Emmett, whose Things number among the most notable contributions in the Thingiverse, similarly doesn’t sketch much. But in his case, it’s because his “imagination works in 3D already.” Communicating an idea to someone else, however, deserves a sketch. Renee not only sketches, but cleans that sketch up in Illustrator before bringing it into a modeling environment.
The creator of MakerBot mascot R.Maker (pictured above), ErikJDurwoodII, said he sketches to lend some purpose to the CAD process, even if that sketch will change over time, and Gregg Wygonik also uses sketching to make sure the computer phase doesn’t include avoidable elements that cause discouragement. (Visit Gregg’s Thingiverse page here.)
Stephen Holmes, who writes for Develop3D, pinged us on twitter with a really relevant article showing yet another mindset: 3D sketching. The people at the UK product design consultancy 3form Design (3fD) do specifically leave pencil and paper sketching out of their process. Founder Austen Miller argues that the “reverse engineering” required to take a designers sketch on paper into the domain of the engineer can cause the loss of original design intentions. Instead, the groups designers start in SolidWorks.
Echoing what our commenters said:
Miller doesn’t succumb to the argument that by jumping straight into CAD stifles creativity. In his opinion, just like pen and paper, CAD is a tool and depends whose hand it’s in as to the end result. “Creativity should not be measured by the medium we choose but how successful we can be with it…”
Thanks, all, for the input!
These Kids Are Making 3D Printed Jewelry Because They Can
Remain calm. This is just a video of adorable, 3D-modeling-and-3D-printing-savvy children designing a pendant in Tinkercad and printing it on a MakerBot Replicator. While surrounded by copies of Arduino Cookbook. So I suppose the phrase Happy Monday means something now.
For more videos from Osamu Iwasaki’s, which pretty much run the gamut of everything, here’s his website.
April 22 2012
CUNY Tech Valedictorian Richard Fisher To Donate His MakerBot Replicator
NY Daily News has a great profile today about an Iraqi War veteran, Purple Heart recipient, and New York City College of Technology Class of 2012 Valedictorian.
Let’s add one more to the list: MakerBot aficionado.
Richard Fisher will graduate on June 4th with the honor mentioned above, but his path to that degree wasn’t so direct. As The Daily News piece points out, Richard was a “terrible student in high school who got serious about academics after his brush with death during military service in the [Iraq] War.” He never told me about that last part; only that he had served four-and-a-half years on active duty in the US Navy, and two-and-a-half in the Reserves. He has a two-week active duty stint on schedule before graduation.
Richard’s story jumped out at me not just because he is a cool example of a MakerBot operator — more on that in a second. What’s awesome here is how an uninspired high schooler turned his non-academic predilection for Making into an academic career of inspiring others.
During the Fall of 2011 and into the Spring of this year, Richard was a student teacher at I.S. 318, where his primary focus was a 6th Grade shop class. This was Richard’s first exposure to MakerBot, and 3D printing in general. The shop classroom had two MakerBot Thing-O-Matics, which Richard and his cooperating teacher Russ Holstein used as the centerpiece of a sustainability project. Richard told his students to develop a sustainable building, model it, and fill it with models of sustainable furniture.
This was really no small feat. Many “of the concepts associated with design and modeling are a bit abstract which presents a challenge when teaching children that young (11 and 12 years old),” Richard said. But the challenge didn’t deter the kids, it excited them. “Maybe it is their young age, but the [MakerBot Thing-O-Matic] was unanimously voted ‘AWESOME.’ Whenever they saw the light turn on in the printer or heard it start buzzing, everyone wanted to know what was being printed. What is it? How does it work? How long does it take?”
I asked Richard whether the boys or the girls took to the technology better, and he said there was really no difference. And once they got going, the kids “dove right in. We really pushed them beyond what a 12 year old would normally be expected to do. I think that their ability to rise to the occasion was what I found most impressive. That taught me an important lesson: If you give [kids] the tools they need and push them to do more, with the right motivation, they will deliver.”
There’s a nice end to this story. Along the way, Richard started submitting his own furniture designs to a contest at 3DTin.com. Once the kids took notice of what he was posting, they voted for his designs, and Richard came out the winner. We blogged about this at the time without knowing any of Richard’s back story, and were excited then to award him a MakerBot Replicator for his first place finish in the contest. Now we’re even more excited: the guy who has already put his life on the line in the military now plans to donate his Replicator to whichever school he ends up at for his first permanent teaching job.
Why is the Replicator a good fit for the classroom? Because they’re portable and inexpensive; perfect for the classroom, he says. But there’s more to it. As the brother of a technology teacher and a budding one himself, Richard told me there is “so much more” to teaching technology than just computers. “It drives me crazy to hear the words ‘technology’ and ‘computers’ used interchangeably.”
We’re thrilled Richard’s future students will get a chance to engage with concepts of open source hardware, rapid prototyping, and personal fabrication. We couldn’t hope for a better ambassador!
April 17 2012
Is Apple Getting More Serious About 3D?
From Killian Bell at Cult of Mac:
Apple has filed for all sorts of patents related to 3D technologies over the years, sparking speculation that the company will one day bring us 3D-capable Macs and iOS devices. But evidence that it’s about to get serious about 3D technology for iOS devices comes from a recent job listing on its website for a “Computer Vision specialist to strengthen its multi-view stereo research group.”
Killian cautions that it’s not like we’re going to be seeing glasses-free 3D games on the iPhone 5, but gaming is not where my head went. I immediately thought of 3D modeling on a screen.
In The Hunger Games movie, the Gamemakers build and alter the world where the Games are played in virtual 3D. This picture isn’t the best, but you can see some of them manipulating towers and landscapes in real time — all standard sci-fi fare, but how cool would it be to Tinkercad with a 3D interface on your tablet? Even if you couldn’t manipulate the structure with your hands (let’s call that mano-manipulation), seeing it in 3D before you print would be a remarkable improvement, no?
April 06 2012
Rebuilding The Forbidden City, Sorta
Anyone who has used Google’s 3D Warehouse to print elements of Beijing’s Forbidden City, aka the Palace Museum, will be excited to hear this. Loughborough University doctoral student Fangjin Zhang will be using 3D design and printing technology to bring thousands of ancient artefacts back to life.
After a few years of research into the implications of CAD and 3D printing for archaeological restoration. Now Chinese officials have asked her and her team to restore several specific items from the Palace. Let’s hope against hope that some of these end up on Thingiverse!
April 05 2012
Tinkercad Chess Set Design Contest: We Have A Winner!
This past Monday was the close of another very successful design challenge, for which MakerBot collaborated with Tinkercad to find the best original chess set that could be printed on a 3D printer. As a reward, the runners-up will receive printed versions of their designs, while the big winner gets a MakerBot Replicator!
Briefly, the guidance was as follows:
- Wow us
- Make it 3D printable
- Make it kid and granny friendly
We’re going to echo the sentiment of our Tinkercad pals: this was a tough call! The ingenuity shown by the entrants was impressive and surprising. And plentiful! All together, in the two short weeks that the contest ran, there were over 180 submissions. Wowza.
The sets ranged from beautiful modified versions of classic piece designs to highly abstract creations, with several simple and elegant ideas in between. You can go find your own favorites on our Pinterest board dedicated to these chess sets, but here are the winners as announced on Tinkercad’s blog!
Honorable Mentions
Fifth Runner Up
Fourth Runner Up
Third Runner Up
Evolution of Chess by dutchmogul
Second Runner Up
Amsterdam House Chess by MakeALot
First Runner-Up
Tiki Chess by Whystler
Grand Prize Winner
Action Chess by cymon
Not only are the pieces in this set identifiable yet original, they combine into an impressive conquering giant. Cymon played with the fittings to get them right, and the result is phenomenal. We can’t wait to ship him his new MakerBot Replicator! You can see more of cymon’s inspiring design work on his Thingiverse page. But for now, just feast your eyes on this chess set, and print a couple for yourself!
March 28 2012
3DTin Design Contest Winners Announced
Welp, we blog-failed you. There was a super sweet design challenge going on over at 3DTin that we neglected to keep you posted about, but here we come with Lenten penitence! By way of post mortem, here are the results of a Replicator giveaway that brought out the creativity of a bunch of 3DTin users. 3D Tin is a great, user-friendly web-based 3D modeling tool. If this is all Greek to you, there is a wealth of information at our 3D Design Software 101 page.
The rules were fairly uncomplicated: use the 3DTin design tools and upload as many and as varied designs as you wish for the community to score. Most points at the end of the day won a MakerBot Replicator and the top three finishers received a lifetime 3DTin premium subscription!
Check out their blog for more details, but for your convenience, here are the winners:
2nd Runner Up — Phil Tran, who submitted a full arsenal of designs. Literally.
1st Runner Up – Germán. These models also revolved heavily around a theme, but in Germán’s case, it was cars:
And the winner, MrFisher! These models were all over the map, but certainly creative. It’s nearly lunchtime, so I’m drawn to this popcorn popper, but at about 6 o’clock, I’ll be dreaming of one of the bunkbed models in MrFisher’s portfolio. We can’t wait to see how these look once they’re printed on a Replicator and will be following up with pictures!
February 03 2012
Autodesk wants you to know how to print your 123d models on your MakerBot!
Click here to view the embedded video.
Autodesk 123d is one of many freely-available apps that new MakerBot users might consider learning. And unlike some other programs we love, it looks like Autodesk wants it to be easy to print your models on a MakerBot. In fact, they want it so much that they’ve just posted the above video on their youtube channel.
It’s a bit long (over 9 minutes) but put it on your list for when you’re woodshedding your 3d-modeling chops. While it’s specifically aimed at the Thing-O-Matic, most of what they’re saying should transfer to the Replicator. Just model for a larger build area!
123d is a bit different from other modeling programs, and might be a bit counter-intuitive if you’re used to one of the others. However, their youtube channel has a number of tutorials and there are some neat things about the project (like an iPad app and a photo-to-model program.)
If you’re looking to pick up some 3d modeling skills while you’re waiting for your Replicator, this is one of many great programs to learn!
July 19 2011
Tinkercad Quests: Learn Through Making
Tinkercad, a powerful online solid modeling CAD application, has just introduced a new feature that I have a feeling will be very popular among MakerBot Operators.
Secretly (or not so secretly?) the developers are veteran hardcore games developers taking a stab at a new field. They draw from their past UI/interactive design experience to create a focused tool that is designed from the ground up to be as intuitive a modeler as most people need for 3D printing models.
I was at first dubious about a WebGL-based solid modeler, as much as I love 3dtin, but I became converted while team-teaching a “Prototyping on a MakerBot” course for the teen after-school program at Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum. Students picked up Tinkercad quickly, and made intricate, capable work during the first session, projects that I was able to print for them with little or no STL repair!
A number of Thingiverse participants have been using this tool (Including me) – and the Tinkercad “Export to Thingiverse” button makes it easy for them to share their design and print files they have created with the software here.
Well, the Tinkercad developers didn’t leave the games part of their past experience out of the equation — they have started rolling games elements into Tinkercad as a tutorial series designed to help user dive into using their tool quickly and easily. I have taken a couple of them and enjoyed them — and I love the beautiful Thing-O-Matic-printed buttons that is featured in their current Quest set. (They hope to start adding new quests fairly regularly, as these quests generate the feedback they need to tune this element of Tinkercad. Make sure to dive in now and send feedback to help them move forward with the Quests project!)
So create or login to your Tinkercad account — and discover the new Quests tab on the top bar. Happy questing!
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