3D design your furniture in thin air

One of the stumbling blocks to let anybody create in 3D, is the current state of 3D design software. They are hard to use and have a steep learning curves. That is where we are today. There are promising ideas and developments in this area. I am confident that this problem will be solved over […]

The design dilemma

One of the challenges for 3D printing and co-creation is, that 3D design software is hard to use. They have a steep learning curve and it is certainly not easy to create something.

Effects of 3D printing on society

Like any new disrupting technology 3D printing — when it matures — has great impact on society. Mass production brought us affordable high quality goods, mass-media brought us high quality entertainment, and up-to-date information and the internet is changing the way we work and live.

3D printing or mass production — when does it make sense?

3D printing makes sense for one-off and small series production. That is the obvious answer. The more elaborate answer is that it depends on the actual volume of the product and its parts. Redeye (division of Stratasys) made some calculations and put them on the web.

Iterative design, 3D printing, co-creation and marshmallows

Let's talk about iterative design. 3D printing makes it possible to produce unique one-off designs for reasonable costs. This enables designers to implement design improvements based on customer-feedback. It is one of the ideas of co-creation to let consumers and designers work together on a design.

Recipes for your 3D printer

Mark Ganter from the University of Washington works in the Department of Mechanical Engineering. Together with Duane Storti he runs the Solheim Additive Manufacturing Laboratory. In their laboratory they work on new material recipes for 3D printing. They've come up with some interesting new materials.

Rapid assembly with physical voxel fabrication

Previously, I wrote about Digital Materials and Voxels. In this post I want to show you an excellent movie rendering of how both can be combined to make a machine. They call the machine the rapid assembler.

DMCA does not cut it for 3D printing

A form or function cannot be copyrighted and only patterns on objects can fall under copyright. This means that the Safe Harbor provision of the DMCA cannot be applied to 3D models. The challenge of applying copyright on 3D models is a problem for everyone - service providers and creators alike.

3D on the web — WebGL to the rescue

There is at last progress on bringing 3D to the web. For years, different companies have tried to solve this problem, but the solutions — often with proprietary browser plugins — were cumbersome and limited. With the creation of WebGL, there is finally a way forward.

Pirated 3D Models

Some people ask me what keeps me up at night. One of the answers is Intellectual Property and personal fabrication. At the moment we get about one DMCA Content Notice Take Down request a week at Shapeways.