Shapeways 3D Printspiration

Shapeways.com is the world’s leading 3D Printing marketplace and community.

Welcome to the Future of Stuff.
Recent Tweets @Shapeways
This is Awesome
Posts tagged "awesome"

Shapeways Educational Discount for 3D Printing on a Student Budget

Today we have launched the first stage of the Shapeways Educational Program with an awesome 10% discount on 3D printing for all students and educators with a Shapeways account registered with an .edu email address.

This is our first step at helping students and educators have better access to high quality 3D printing through Shapeways.  We will be rolling out more features as part of the Shapeways Education Program so that everyone from elementary to post graduate students can use 3D printing to help them learn, understand and communicate their ideas whether they be technical, artistic or conceptual.

Register for the 10% discount on all 3D printing by visiting the Shapeways Education page and activating your email.  The 10% discount will automatically be applied at checkout unless you have another discount code you wish to enter.  You can still use Shapeways credit and your student discount at the same time.

We will continuously monitor and review the educational discount so that we can optimize it to students needs which may involve a change in the terms under which we offer the discount.  We will keep all of those registered for the education discount updated on any changes and/or additions to the program.  We will also work to include other educational institutions that do not have an .edu domain for their emails in the near future.

Please pass on the details of the discount to your friends, fellow students and teachers, the more people that are registered and use the educational discount, the more incentive there is for Shapeways to develop the educational program further. 

If you have any other ideas you would like to see implemented into the Shapeways educational program please email education@shapeways.com

suziam:

I made a new ring! This one is a classic design, a simple banded ring in silver. Naturally ordered from Shapeways.

It’s now in the store, and I share the ‘behind-the-scenes’ process in my blog post here:
http://owlposse.com/blog/2012/09/3d-printing-know-how/ 

3D Printing the Stairway to Heaven and/or Star Wars Theme (VIDEO)

Can’t decide whether to 3D Print Stairway to Heaven or the Star Wars Theme for you Fisher Price turntable? No Problem, you can simply order the Double Sided Disc hot from the Shapeways 3D Printer.

You do not need to settle for this double disc of 70’s nostalgia when you can design your own thanks to an Instructables by our latest hero Fred Murphy aka Fred27 aka Fred27.

“Attached you’ll find the new version of my Fisher Price music editing software. It’s included as an executable and (if you don’t trust randomly downloaded software from the internet) the C# source code is there too. Feel free to take a nose around in the source code and compile it with the free version of Visual C# 2010 Express.

You’ll also need a copy of OpenSCAD. This amazing software allows the scripting of 3D CAD objects and is what turns the idea of what you want into the STL file that a 3D printer accepts.

Wow - all this software and no need to pay a penny for any of it.

If this all sounds like too much trouble, then you can just open one of the pre-generated STL files. Your jukebox comprises of Stairway to Heaven, the Star Wars theme and You are my Sunshine. If none of those float your boat then don’t complain… get editing. I’d love to hear what you can do.”

You can download the files you need to get started here, rock on, and PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE share your videos with us….

3D Printed Soldering Attachment for a BIC Lighter : Macgyver Meets Geek


With this series of 3D Printed Soldering attachments for a BIC lighter you can be like MacGyver and repair your PCB’s anywhere.  Sure, it may be a little more geeky than MacGyver, and perhaps without the brown leather jacket and frosted tips, but MacGyverish all the same….

Available in 11 variations 3D Printed in Stainless Steel from the Mechnology shop on Shapeways including the the 0.8mm round tip to the 2.4mm wide tip you are sure to find an ultra-portable soldering iron tip to meet your needs, AND impress your friends…

We are working on a series of videos featuring a few members of the Shapeways community showcasing their amazing work. We are so excited with some of the footage we could not help but share this one of the ’Crania Anatomica Filigre’ Skull by Joshua Harker being cleaned, hot from the 3D Printer….. Take a look at this footage of the cleaning and keep an eye out for more videos of 3D Printing action…

The Shape of What’s to Come: Our New Look & Feel : Rebranding is LIVE!!

The spark. It appears late at night, in a daydream, while doing a million other things. It often scurries across the forefront of your mind when you least expect it. But that fleeting spark, that spark has the potential to turn into a design, a product, a company, a community.

Starting today, Shapeways has a new look and feel. It starts with the spark - the idea, the laser - and continues with you, and the future that the Shapeways community is making a reality.

Why the change? Just as the 3D printing materials have improved and your designs have increased in complexity and beauty, we started growing out of our old clothes. We felt the need to break out of the box (link to old logo photo?) as this future is boundless. We also wanted to show your designs in the best possible light, and alas, our old sad dolphin blue isn’t flattering on anyone. 

Most importantly, though, we wanted to make sure that the experience you have on Shapeways.com and in the wild has deep roots in our core values.

While we could continue to wax poetic about our inspiration and color theories, hopefully the design speaks for itself. Many thanks to our talented design team and engineers who made this real. And big thanks to the whole team for tirelessly shaping what’s to come.

Check out the Shapeways Look & Feel for more.

PLEASE someone 3D Print this idea….

jaidrawsthings:

Projecy 365 - Day 168

Moldensils

I got this idea from those Gundam kits that you need to assemble. I like to assemble things. This product doesn’t need assembly, but I liked the way it can be presented. More of form over function with this one.

superdeformed:

I’m 100% satisfied customer!

todayimadeco:

Two days of New York, two days of Awesome. Here’s a quick recap:

First, Etsy.

We arrived at their Dumbo based Headquarters thoroughly sweaty (89° F + humidity) and thoroughly late, but were immediately relieved of our bad conscience by the exceptionally friendly and enthusiastic Morgan Evans. She gave us an extensive tour of the HQ and the labs – decorated in the most elaborate and individual style we’ve ever seen in an office space. Crocheted air duct warmers, wall-sized artwork, a DIY photo automat, screen and letter printing facilities – and in between a team of more than a hundred smiling, concentrated, inspired and inspiring people. You could virtually feel the Etsy spirit and the focus on building a real community of makers and crafters! We talked to a few of the team members, including Matt, whom we hope to meet again in Berlin soon. And in case you didn’t notice: We enjoyed every single minute there.

Next up: Shapeways.

Located in midtown Manhattan, Shapeways resides in an unassuming office space from where they are building a maker community around sophisticated 3D printing services. And if we say sophisticated, we mean SOPHISTICTATED! The models they have on display were absolutely awesome: Highly detailed, with intricate structures and a wide variety of materials – rigid, flexible, rough, smooth, rubbery, whatever you imagine. We had a great chat with Mary and Natalia about bringing together different aspects of and takes on creativity, and we will stay in contact to develop further ideas about knowledge sharing for makers and connecting different communities.

Last stop on Monday: NYEBN Startup roundtable

Taking place in a severely overcooled room at NYU’s Stern School of Business, we had the chance to listen and talk to fast talking, witty and inspiring serial entrepreneur and NY “super angel” David S. Rose. For those who know him from his famous TED talk: He can explain his ideas in even less time, he is even funnier when telling his own story, and yes, he can talk even faster. But what we found most impressing was his open and down-to-earth attitude – when you talk to him, you know you’ll get honest and constructive feedback. Heavily recommended, should you get the chance!

First stop non Tuesday: Makerbot Industries

Although operating in a similar area as Shapeways, Makerbot takes a very different apporach to 3D printing: Own a printer, understand how it works, pimp it and print stuff at home. They’re located in Brooklyn, producing printers, designs and in a way the future of production in a few places scattered around 3rd Ave and Dean St. Being there is a bit like being in maker heaven: We never saw so many makerbots in one place, and watching them printing simultaneously and illuminated is like watching a machine ballet. Simply AWESOME. Equally awesome was talking to Sasha and Andrew, their Social Media and Blog guys – we could feel the passion for what they are doing, and we could hardly stop ourselves from keeping them from their work because talking to them was so much fun. We’ll definitely stay in touch! (And we hope @philipsteffan, our Berlin friend from the ODC with makerbot #23, will one day find his way to the mothership, too.)

In the outskirts of Brooklyn: 3rd Ward

Surrounded by eroded industrial buildings, signposts of early gentrification and its typical mixture of neighbourhood natives and hipsters, 3rd Ward is situated between Williamsburg and Bushwick – and it’s one of the most amazing places we’ve ever seen IN ANY CONTEXT: photo studios, large and extremely well equipped workshops for wood, metal, jewelry and textile work, combined with a coworking space (complete with an armada of ready-to-work-with iMacs) and class rooms, weaved together in a general architectural awesomeness. Always wanted to build your own cardboard furniture or surf board, learn to repair your bike or upholster a sofa, sew, saw or just hang out with extremely creative people? Take a visit and you’ll be hooked. Thanks to Will for showing us around – we’ll be back! (And in the meantime, miss Brooklyn even more.)

Last stop in New York: NYC Resistor

Before heading for the bus to Boston (another story altogether), we went back to Boerum Hill, picked up our stuff at Makerbot and paid short visit to hardcore makers at the NYC Resistor, New York’s first hackerspace, where Catarina gave us quick tour. In between saved robots (who have been retrained to stab, mix drinks and do other important tasks), machines that look like particle accelerators and pieces of high voltage artwork, we met a few really dedicated hackers, working on stuff equally sophisticated and nerdy. And we discovered a laser cutted room decoration thingy that uses the same bending technique as the book cover we saw (and photographed) in Berlin’s Open Design City – knowledge sharing FTW!

Now we’re exhausted but content. Good bye New York, hello Boston!

stlfile:

amsterdamretard:

Mike Pelletier

Lucy Portrait 

2011, 3d print from dental scans 

@stlfile » data, data, data and more data. Can’t wait till you can just find some data lying by the side or the road, or side of the web road.

Virginia Tech: 3D Printing Vending Machine