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3D Printing Blueprints

You're reading from   3D Printing Blueprints Using the free open-source Blender software, anyone can design models for 3D printing. Fantastic fun and a great experience whether or not you have a 3D printer, this book is a crash course in the new technology.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849697088
Length 310 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Joe Larson Joe Larson
Author Profile Icon Joe Larson
Joe Larson
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

3D Printing Blueprints
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Design Tools and Basics FREE CHAPTER 2. Mini Mug 3. Face Illusion Vase 4. SD Card Holder Ring 5. Modular Robot Toy 6. D6 Spinner 7. Teddy Bear Figurine 8. Repairing Bad Models 9. Stretchy Bracelet 10. Measuring – Tips and Tricks Index

Summary


When 3D modeling is focused on the render for a video or image, "if it looks good" that's all the criteria the modelers need. However, 3D printing needs to have its geometry well defined, or it can't bring something from the virtual to the real world.

Fixing bad geometry may not be the most entertaining part of 3D modeling for everyone. But being able to identify the unnecessary edges or vertices, create faces to patch holes, and rotate edges when they're in the way, and build a watertight, manifold model are valuable skills. And if you think about it like a puzzle to solve, it can be quite satisfying. Being able to take a model that wasn't made for 3D printing and fixing it, means that entire libraries of ready-made models open up online, so you don't have to make everything you want to print from scratch.

There are tools such as netfabb (http://netfabb.com) and meshlab (http://meshlab.sourceforge.net/) that can do a lot of these sorts of things semi-automatically. They're not complete...

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