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Most 3D prints are made from either PLA or ABS filament. The former is easy to use, but delicate. The latter is harder to print, and similarly rigid, but is much more impact-resistant.
While MakerBot owner Stratasys has revealed flexible 3D-printed shoes before, it uses a very expensive US$330,000 printer with a blend of plastic and rubber materials to offer different levels of ...
The 3D-printed dress, created by Dutch designer Iris van Herpen with Julia Koerner, was fabricated by i.materialise on its Mammoth Stereolithography machines.
Here’s some interesting work shared by [Ben Kromhout] and [Lukas Lambrichts] on making flexible 3D prints, but not by using flexible filament. After seeing a project where a sheet of plywood … ...
Thanks to a new flexible filament from Recreus that can be used in standard 3D printers without clogging the nozzle, you can finally design and print your own kicks in a wide variety of colors.
Nervous System, a generative design studio, is working to change that: its new, free desktop app Kinematics allows anyone with a 3D printer to create flexible products at home.
This is the beginning of 3D printed flexible armor, a great method for cosplay builds, and a really cool way to add another trick to your 3D printing toolkit. Hexagons tesselate.
To see if they could emulate the grooming properties of a cat's tongue, Dr Noel and Dr Hu 3D printed a flexible brush with similar, albeit larger, papillae-like nubs.