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Brass PU coated has entered the building!

After gold plated brass, we’re happy to offer you the PU coated version! Check out how you can use the material in your designs.

Firstly, we introduced to you gold plated polished brass, but from today on, the natural PU coated version has entered the building! Asked by many people of the community we’re happy to offer you this material. Michael Mueller, designer: “The brass material looks great, really nice to use with jewelry. ”
Brass has by nature a yellow/reddish color. By choosing the PU coated option, your model will keep the original color and be protected against scratches and oxidation. Mueller made a brass PU coated version of his whistle and the result looks stunning:

Compared with gold plated polished brass (brass electroplated with a tiny layer of gold), your design will have a vintage look which you see a lot nowadays. If you compare the two finishes, you can clearly see the difference. More information can be found on the material page.

Designers use th

Raspberry Pi blows life into the Bioscope

The Raspberry Pi (RPi) is produced to learn people how to program. Check out how Simon de Bakker and Jon Stam used it for their Bioscope!

The RPi, a single board computer (read: a tiny computer) was developed by the University of Cambridge and is now used for many creative designs. By keeping the price low ($25-$35), the Raspberry Pi Foundation wants to make it accessible to everyone. And it seems to work; on the day of the launch in february the distributing website crashed and the  first 10.ooo RPi’s were sold out in just a few hours time. Since then the RPi  is a real science sensation. Although it’s designed for educational purposes everyone finds its way to this little digital wonder. Just type the name in Google and you will find people using it for digital signage, games or as a cheap home cinema.

Why is it interesting for 3D printing? Well, the Raspberry Pi doesn’t come with a case, so that makes it great to combine with a customized 3D printed case like Jon Stam and Simo

Tinkercad offers academic institutions free software

Tinkercad, the easy to use 3D design web app,  just launched a massive project. For a limited time, qualified academic institutions can use $50,000 worth of Tinkercad software.

What a great project to help democratizing 3D design throughout schools. The first 1,000 applicants can use Tinkercad for free instead of paying the yearly application fee of $75. This on-line application must be submitted by midnight PST on Friday, December 7th, 2012.

In order to apply for this plan, here’s what you’ll need to know:

  • This plan is open to ALL academic institutions, home schools, non-profits and other similar organizations whose mission is to further advance the study and teaching of 3D design and 3D printing to students
  • You must be able to provide accreditation or non-profit status verification
  • The plan applies to the 2012/2013 school year (summer 2013 included)
  • You must currently possess a 3D printer, have access to a 3D printer OR have the intent to purchase one in the 2012/201

3D printing meets Vintage

3D printing is starting a new industrial revolution. But does that mean we have to throw away all the rest? Not at all. Quentin de Coster, a Design student from Brussels, created a wonderful design by making a perfect blend between 3D printing and vintage.

Every year the Belgian non-profit organisation Petits Riens/Spullenhulp organizes a massive fashion and design show. Big Belgian names like Delvaux, (Edouard Vermeulen) Natan, Dirk Wynants, Elvis Pompilio and a bunch of young Belgian talents are challenged to design new creations out of recycled materials and clothes. After the show people can bid for two hours on the items while they are being displayed on big screens.

Quentin de Coster was one of the designers and started thinking how to reuse objects with new techniques. He used 3D printing to design special handle for an umbrella. de Coster: “I designed the umbrella Branch as an open invitation to share it with other people. When you’re walking in the rain with a friend

Featured Friday: Showing your 3D printed designs

Happy friday everyone! We hope you had a nice week, we certainly did. To end the week in beauty: check out the newest designs in our gallery.

Michael Mueller is the designer of the first piece we want to show you: the Fox Whistle.  In many folklore cultures, the fox appears as a symbol of deceptiveness and trickery. Like ‘Reynard the Fox’, a medieval charismatic character that’s always in trouble, but the good thing is: he is always able to talk his way out of any retribution. Mueller designed this whistle to be reminded about that deceptiveness. The design is printed in gold plated brass and can be used as a pendant.

Next design we’d like to show you is from Ras Leaudevie, a Belgian designer. This silver jewel is finished with high gloss, one of our four finishes. It’s a cosmological symbol filled with geometrical figures and shows how the stars and planets behave.

Last, but not least: the nicely designed Galaxy Samsung S3 Voronoi cover. 3D Materialize Ltd designed the ca

New app alert: Autodesk 123D Design

Update: Autodesk has discontinued this app. It is no longer available for download.

Is your head always stuck with great ideas, but you have no clue how to model? No problem! With the new free 123D Design app created by Autodesk, you don’t need to worry about learning complex 3D design concepts. Designing is now just one app away. It even works in your browser!

Design the things you imagine, and then make them real! With Autodesk 123D Design you can use natural design and editing tools to create a 3D model. Then 3D print your model by clicking the “choose i.materialise” button.

How it works

  • Get started with one of the basic shapes. In just a few clicks you can already be cruising along with your design.
  • Professional 3D modeling skills are not required. Using the creation and editing tools is straightforward and natural, so you can focus on what you’re designing, not how to design it.
  • 123D Design automatically creates the most natural connection between parts. When

Enjoy our reduced ceramics prices!

Good news: from today on, the price for ceramics will be $0.18/cm²!

Choose any color you want without being worried about the prize. This is the color range we currently offer:

  • Glossy White
  • Glossy Black
  • Satin Black
  • Lemon Yellow
  • Pistachio Green
  • Sky blue
  • Ocean Turquoise
  • True blue
  • Peach Orange

 

Ceramics is the first food safe material we’re offering at the moment. So go wild with your designs. It’s a great material for table ware, candle holders, tiles, vases and art pieces, but don’t hesitate to think out of the box. The models are made from alumina silica ceramic powder and sealed with porcelain and silicia. The colored glaze we apply after printing is a lead-free, non-toxic gloss.
For more detailed information about the basic properties, check out our design guide.

We’re so excited to see all the new designs our community members (and everyone else of course) will create by using this material. Enjoy!

Winner(s) of the Christmas Ornaments Challenge

We saw 23 nice entries by different designers, but there can only be one winner…Oh no, that’s not true; because there were so many nice designs: we’ve chosen three Christmas Ornaments! Surprise!

It was very clear on facebook: Luigi Vaghi’s Ribbon for X-mas is the design with the most likes! 48 people voted for him on facebook. Congratulations!

HARD
Luigi Vaghi worked really hard and we saw more and more designs from him being uploaded on the website. He made 4 designs for this challenge: the X-Mas ball, a simple Christmas ball with wholes and a sphere full of ‘like’ buttons.


LEAFS

We were so happy with all the entries that we decided to choose two more winners. The second place is for the most clever design (full of moving parts) with the second most likes on facebook:  Jolien Rasschaert! Her design got 35 votes and is inspired by leafs. She didn’t make it easy for herself by designing different moveable parts.

The third design is very heartwarming. It’s a small winte

MeshUp: Mashup for meshes

For those of you who ever wondered how to save the world from polygons, we may have found the answer at the recent 3D Printshow in London: MeshUp. Developed by a Norwegian company called Uformia, MeshUp wants to create the missing link between advanced 3D modeling features and easy modification by non-experienced 3D modelers.

“MeshUp is the first real volume modeler for meshes. We want to make life easier for 3D printing and for creators. At Uformia we envision a very different experience for users, where without effort, a creator can be sure that their models are always ready for 3D printing.”

At the 3D Printshow, Uformia offered free face scans. They could be used to effortlessly model and personalize a variety of template objects that are watertight and ready to print. For example, ‘Tor Kipper’, a coffee cup with real face scan data that we printed for Uformia in glossy white ceramics.

Features

  • Mesh mixing: Create new objects by remixing any number of meshes and