3D printed olaf
▷ olaf the snowman from frozen stl 3d models 【 STLFinder 】
Olaf from FROZEN Snowman 3D print model
cgtrader
Olaf from FROZEN 3D print model Christmas includes two stl figures with different poses of the Olaf character Height 15 cm
Do you wanna print a snowman? - Olaf from Frozen
thingiverse
... you can use brown or gold filaments. Finally, you can colour them in to match the character from the movie. When assemblying, I normally put a dab of clear silicon sealant on the shaft. ... Did you sing the words "Do you wanna print a snowman?" :)
Olaf from Frozen - Cookie Cutter
cults3d
Olaf from Frozen - Cookie Cutter Olaf de Frozen - Cookies Cutter Comes the stl and the source file
Souvenir magnet on the wall. Olaf from the cartoon Frozen.
thingiverse
This icon was painted for my youngest daughter, whom 6 years old and she loves the cartoon Frozen. Made in a small batch, there are no similar products. I tried several options, with and without layers and at different speeds. This is a continuation...
Olaf snowman from FROZEN cookie cutter with detail 3D print model
cgtrader
OLAF is the snowman from Disney's FROZEN cartoon movie. It contains an outer shell to cut the shape, an inner shell to stamp the details Use the handle (glued on the inner shell) to facilitate the stamping process. I will take personalised orders...
Olaf from Disney's Frozen
thingiverse
My design for a 3D printed Olaf the snowman. Please follow/like for...
Olaf from Frozen, Cookie Cutter
grabcad
No problem :) but first..•Like us on facebook @ https://www.facebook.com/metapexofficial/•Subscribe & watch videos on our channel @ https://youtu.be/g77G56u_e50•Follow us on Linked-in @ https://www.linkedin.com/company-beta/13349239/•Follow also...
Olaf from frozen 3D model
cgtrader
model made in blender 2.79b available file formates: BLEND FBX OBJ image taxtures carrot: https://www.textures.com/download/vegetables0008/24968 wood: https://www.textures.com/download/barkdecidious0107/17362 stone:...
Olaf- Frozen Snowman Low-poly 3D model
cgtrader
Olaf- Frozen Snowmen 3D Models Christmas Character with skeleton and 2 Blend Shape No rigged No Blend Shape 3ds max Texture resolution 2000 X 2000
Olaf the Snowman
thingiverse
. .. to resolve any issues in a timely manner. Email - [email protected] / [email protected] this model was downloaded from 3D warehouse as a sketchup model and converted into an stl. ... the stl was then repaired and made printable.
Olaf from Frozen head on- Cookie Cutter
cults3d
Olaf from Frozen - Cookie Cutter - head on Olaf de Frozen - Cookies Cutter - From the front
Olaf from FROZEN 3D print model
cults3d
Olaf from FROZEN 3D print model **Christmas*** includes two stl figures with different poses of the Olaf character Height 15 cm
Olaf from Disney Frozen (Cookie Cutter)
thingiverse
Olaf from Disney Frozen - Cookie Cutter
Olaf from Frozen Free 3D model
cgtrader
This is Olaf from the 2015 film Frozen. It was created in blender over a few days and also has simple materials. The file is an FBX so can be imported into most 3D software. ...
Olaf from Frozen - Snowflake Christmas Ornament
thingiverse
What I did to create the model: Download PDF from anthonyherreradesigns.com, open PDF in graphics program, remove the guides for folding, mirror the paths that make up Olaf, copy & rotate 5 times to make a complete snowflake, clean up paths, export...
Frozen Olaf
cults3d
Frozen Olaf
Olaf Frozen
cults3d
Made it with the iPad Pro
Tsum Tsum Olaf from Frozen Cookie Cutter 3D print model
cgtrader
Tsum Tsum Olaf from Frozen Cookie or Fondant Cutter 2. 5-3 3D Model -STL File
Olaf from Frozen 3D model Low-poly 3D model
cgtrader
Olaf snowman from Frozen 3D model, made and polypainted on Blender 2.82 unwrapped uvs non overlapping usable for game or 3d printing you also have a turnaround in mp4 and rendered preview
Olaf from Frozen.
thingiverse
Great character, and design. ...thanks to whomever designed this fun model.
Olaf from Frozen
thingiverse
Merry Christmas~
Anna Elsa Olaf from Frozen Support Free Remix
myminifactory
Time-lapse print video : https://youtu. be/nXSQrnCdxPc Remix to support free and printed. **Olaf from https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4363123 (Easy print no support) by Alsamen Subscribe to find out more support free 4K Time-lapse video:...
Frozen 2 Olaf
cults3d
Olaf is a fictional character from Disney's Frozen franchise, produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios. Olaf is first presented in Frozen as an animate snowman created by Elsa and Anna in their childhood. ... #snow #frozen
Olaf Frozen cookie cutter
cults3d
Olaf Frozen cookie cutter
Olaf (Frozen) SLA/DLP
thingiverse
Everyone loves Olaf the funny clumsy Snowman from Frozen. .. Why not print one yourself? ... This is a 3d model for SLA or DLP printing, there is also one for FDM The model was made in Fusion360 with reference photos The picture above is my own...
Disney Frozen Inspired Mouse Ear - Olaf Style Snowman 3D print model
cgtrader
Disney Frozen Inspired Mouse Ears - Olaf Style Snowman 3D print model Pair with another of my mouse ears on a headband to create a unique set of Mouse ears for your next trip to Disney
Olaf - Frozen (Minecraft Organic)
sketchfab
Olaf from Frozen in Minecraft Disclaimer: trees are modified version from a tree by Plutouthere
Frozen Olaf Cookie Cutter
thingiverse
Olaf from Frozen dancing cookie cutter. ... Made the arms and hair attached more so they don't break when being cut.
Frozen Olaf - Cookie cutter
thingiverse
Olaf from Frozen cookie cutter PLA 0.2-0.3 No support needed. ... Dimensions: 156x100x12mm
Cookie Cutter - Frozen Olaf
cults3d
Cookie Cutter Frozen Olaf Size: 10cm
People of 3D Printing: Olaf Diegel
3D Learning Hub
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Olaf Diegel
Olaf Diegel, Professor of Additive Manufacturing at the University of Auckland
- Odd Guitars
- /in/olaf-diegel
Who is Olaf Diegel?
When did you start to use 3D printing?
I started using 3D printing in the mid-90s purely as a rapid prototyping tool. We would design new products, and then use 3D printing to prototype and test our ideas before taking them to production. But as I saw the technologies improving year by year I became more and more interested in 3D printing as an actual production technology to produce real parts to sell directly to the customer. I started to realize that, if you want to use 3D printing for real production, you need to design for it quite differently than if you are designing for conventional manufacturing. Otherwise, it can just become a slower and more expensive way of making things than with traditional manufacturing.
Over the last 20 years, I have become a passionate follower of 3D printing. I believe it is one of the technologies that has been a real godsend to innovation as it allows designers and inventors to instantly test out ideas to see if they work. It also removes the traditional manufacturing constraints that have become a barrier to creativity and allows us to get real products to market without the normally high costs that can become a barrier to innovation.
In 2012, I started manufacturing a range of 3D printed guitars and basses that has developed into a successful little side-business.
What kind of 3D printing projects do you like working on?
To me, the projects I enjoy doing the most are those where we greatly reduce the weight of parts. This is because weight reduction adds all sorts of value to parts. From the shipping cost reductions to the sustainability of using less material, and down to the simple logic that, the less material you use in your design, the less material the 3D printing system has to process, so the faster it prints and the cheaper the part becomes.
We have done some amazing manifolds, for example, where we reduce the weight of the products by over 95%. And not only do they weigh less, but they also perform better as we can reduce the pressure drop caused by 90-degree corners by replacing them with gently curving channels.
And, of course, just form a pure fun point of view, the 3D printed guitars I make allow my imagination to run a bit wild and push the limits of what you can do with 3D printing. At the moment I am making guitar number 84, so although far from a mass-production product, it still shows how low-volume high-value products can be made with 3D printing.
What is your advice for someone about to get started with 3D printing?
The biggest advice I can give to someone getting started with 3D printing is not to just treat it as a direct replacement technology for conventional manufacturing. It isn’t, and probably never will be. It is a technology that you should only use if it can add enough value to your product to overcome the high cost and slow speed restrictions of the technology. And, to maximize the benefits of the technologies, you really have to learn how to design for them the right way.
And the other advice I would give is never just to print for the sake of printing. Always think about the easiest way to achieve the functionality you need, in the context you need to produce it in, and use the best technology to achieve that.
In general, why do you think 3D printing is a game-changing technology?
To me, the best thing about 3D printing is that it makes you think differently! And, because anything that makes you think differently is a great tool to stimulate innovation, 3D printing is a winner; It removes many of the restrictions of conventional manufacturing, it allows you to realize things that would be impossible if you only restrict yourself to conventional manufacturing.
What is your point of view on the evolution of additive manufacturing over the years and how do you see the future of 3D printing?
The evolution of 3D printing over the last 30 years has been incredible. The quality kept getting better and better, and about a dozen years ago some of the technologies started getting good enough for production parts. To me, the next push needs to be speed, speed, and more speed. At the moment, all technologies are still relatively slow, which is one of the things that makes them expensive or impractical for a larger production.
As speeds get better, industry adoption will increase exponentially, I think. We also need more materials, particularly soft materials. One of the areas that excite me most, in the future, will be the ability to print electronics as an integral part of the product, as this will truly change the way we develop products.
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STL File Sven Reindeer Frozen Reindeer・3D Printer Design Download・Cults
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Design measurement: 14 3D printed items
- Forbes Life
- Alisa Kornilova-Rivkind Author
3D printed designer items available for purchase now
In April 2014, the architect and designer Philippe Starck launched an online store where anyone can choose a template and refine the appearance of interior items, and then print the thing on a 3D printer. Stark expressed his confidence that the 3D printer will completely change the way we look at design: stores will turn into open creative platforms where customers can produce unique products.
The market for 3D printed items and self-printing instructions is growing daily. Online retailers have emerged that specialize in 3D printing for everything from furniture and musical instruments to shoes and desserts.
Forbes has selected 14 3D printed designer items available for purchase right now.
Jewelry pendants collection Chestahedron
Californian architect Frank Chester promotes "freedom from freedom of creativity" - the rejection of both a superficially objective and purely subjective approach to art in favor of discovering the original "spiritual" forms in nature. For a long time studying biomorphic structures and Platonic solids (regular polyhedra with spatial symmetry), he discovered a new geometric figure - heptahedron chestaghedron. Subsequently, it turned out that his heptahedron exactly corresponds to the configuration and internal structure of the human heart. A series of pendants with chestahedrons made of metal alloys, bronze and silver was released in June 2014 using 3D printing as a progressive version of the usual heart pendants, introducing new knowledge and technologies.
Price: $69 to $299
Soda sunglasses
Soda sunglasses made from multi-coloured bioplastic showcase a new way of interacting with the consumer, offering a choice of ready-made glasses and separate frames with temples - 4 shapes and 22 colors in any combination (plus versatile dark lenses). With glasses, the buyer receives instructions for self-3D printing of the frame and its subsequent assembly. The store takes on the feel of a workshop—the site includes a video of a printer being printed and a link to an updated moodboard of things and looks that inspire Soda designers, from gummy bears and car concepts to sneaker ads and silent movie frames.
Price: €39.99
Slow food bowl for cat food
Dutch Monique de Wilt designed a slow feeding device for one of her cats, who always tries to swallow a portion of wet food as quickly as possible and suffers from nausea afterwards. A ceramic lid with holes in the shape of a cat's paw makes you extract and eat each piece individually.
Price: €31.37
Nooka watch with PU bracelets
A limited edition of 12 unisex sports watches from the American brand Nooka with lightweight polyurethane bracelets created by laser cutting and 3D printing. For each of the dials, you can pick up three types of bracelets - "Trillion", "Honeycomb" or "Waves".
Price: $99-139
Elvis Pompilio & MGX fedora hat
A sophisticated version of the classic fedora hat in white polyamide by renowned Belgian hat maker Elvis Pompilio, who has worked with fashion houses Christian Dior and Valentino. The 3D fedora is distinguished from straw prototypes by its refined weaving pattern and noticeably less weight.
Price: €496
Case for iPhone 5\5S
Cases for digital gadgets are the simplest and most popular things created using household 3D printing. Among the countless shell options for the latest iPhone, you'll find a durable, polished polyamide case with a retro spinning dial that mimics the mechanics of older phones.
Price: €13.95
Wine bottle decoration Inter Culture
Openwork "shoulder" in white polyamide for bottles on the festive table from Tokyo-based brand Inter Culture. There are four shapes and sizes to choose from: Moët & Chandon, Dom Pérignon, traditional Bordeaux and Burgundy.
Price: €49.01
Vertigo Polka bag
Vertigo Polka is a brand of designer accessories from Illinois. Its founder, Robert Drummond, has specialized exclusively in 3D printing for the past four years. Small interior ceramics, bags and a large selection of jewelry made from a variety of materials, from nylon thread to silver and gilded brass, made the brand famous. One of the novelties is a miniature women's satchel bag, an actual model in the spirit of glam-sport and futurism, made of flexible polyamide mesh with a grainy matte surface that is pleasant to the touch and an optional chain length over the shoulder.
Price: €117
Eragatory Gold Plated Cutlery
Founder of the Belgian-British brand Eragatory Isai Bloch believes that 3D printing has a special potential, allowing you to find a balance between pure art and applied tasks. For example, to make gilded cutlery ergonomic, respectable and link together traditional etiquette, the decline of baroque luxury and associations with instruments of torture. The creators emphasize that all Eragatory items must be produced only on a 3D printer.
Price: from €140 to €250 per item
Table and floor lamps
Lamp shades are one of the popular options for experimenting with 3D printing. The simplest are varieties of openwork and mesh designs. The Dazzle Lamp series, designed by Belgian architect and programmer Cornel Cannaerts, takes a far more sophisticated approach, using Z Corp's most advanced color printer capable of transmitting 390,000 unique colors and hundreds of thousands of possible combinations. The desired range of shades can be borrowed from any image and transferred in the form of a mosaic pattern to the inside of the lampshade. When the light is on, the gray-white lampshades on the outside become colored.
Price: on request, individually for each luminaire
Leather and bioplastic ankle boots Bryan Oknyansky
British designer Brian Oknyansky plans to change the fashion shoe market with a development that allows custom-made pairs to be stamped. Trial model - open ankle boots with a lace-up top made of genuine leather and a massive bioplastic base.
The colors of the three printed parts - sole, 15 cm heel and platform - can be freely combined from a ten-color palette. Bulky-looking shoes are light and comfortable: the height of the heel is compensated by the height of the platform, and an ergonomic soft insole is built between the bioplastic and the foot. An architect by training, Oknyansky also custom-designs futuristic footwear made from leather and titanium alloys, using 3D technologies from the fields of space aviation and automotive. In the 2013/2014 season, the designer was nominated for several UK professional fashion and technology awards.
Price: £400
Set of five stools
Janne Kyttanen's five stackable Monarh stools provide an alternative to wicker furniture. The advantages are low weight, mobility and a beautiful lattice structure, complemented by silhouettes of butterflies.