Succulent planter 3d print
🌱 Best 3D print files for 3D printing of planters・Cults
🌱 Best 3D print files for 3D printing of planters
Download 3D files of planters
If you like plants, flowers and decoration, this selection is for you. Here you will find the best STL files for your flower pots that are perfectly 3D printable. Whether it is cactus, climbing plants, flowers or aromatic plants, 3D printing will allow you to magnify your plantations. These 3D creations can take on geometric shapes, cling to your windows or look like pop-culture heroes. The perfect touch for your interior decoration!
Self-Watering Planter (Small)
Free
Plantygon - Modular Geometric Stacking Planter for Succulents
Free
Minion stone age planter
Free
Baby groot (remixed) head planter
Free
Bucky Bowls
Free
"Molcajete" Flowerpot Line
Free
Bonsai Planter
Free
Geodesic Planter Pot
Free
Mario Boo
Free
Video Game Planter Collection
Free
Octopus Planter
Free
Nefertiti Bust [Hollow]
Free
CactusHotel
Free
Voronoi Planter
Free
Customizable Yin-Yang Planter / Container
Free
Concrete Planters Mold
Free
Turtle Planter
Free
Wall Organizer
Free
Ghost Pacman Planter
Free
Space Explorer reworked Planter
Free
Maceta Colgante - Flower Pot
€0. 60
Maceta Colgante - Flower Pot
€0.60
Cat Plant Pot
Free
Faceted Modular Wall Planter
Free
Oddish Planter Remix
Free
Brain Planter
Free
Criss Cross Planter
Free
Boot Planter
Free
Low Poly Planter
Free
honeycomb planter #2
Free
Kirby Whispy Woods Plant Pot
Free
Planter
Free
Planter
Free
Castle Planter
Free
Campbell Planter - Fully 3D Printed Self-Watering Planter
Free
Multi-Color Self-Watering Planter
Free
Planter - 3D Printable Mold or Planter
Free
Mini Middle Eastern Villas Planter (3-in-1)
Free
honeycomb planter #1
Free
Hoppip Planter
Free
Star Spectrum Planter
Free
Sprout - Self-Watering Desktop Planter for small plants and succulents
Free
Mini Middle Eastern Villa Planter
Free
Geometric planter
Free
Planter #3
Free
Blossy: Planter
Free
Little Planter
Free
Anti-gravity Planter
€1
Zigzag Planter
Self-Watering planter (1-5 in 1)
Bonsai Planter
Video Game Planter Collection
Here is our selection of the best flowerpot 3D files, all these beautiful designs are from the 3D file library Cults and are perfectly 3D printable designs.
This collection includes free 3D files of planters of all kinds. You will of course find the classic planters and simple pots, but also some very surprising inspirations. 3D designers are inspired for example by architecture so that their plants find their place in a real urban setting.
There are also pop-culture characters 3D printed to which plants have been grafted. Your cactus and succulents will love becoming the hair of Mario, a Minion or a Pokémon!
Launch your 3D printer, make great 3D printed planters and give them to your friends. This is an excellent gift idea that will surprise and be completely unique!
3d Printed Planter - Etsy.de
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Pots for succulents and not only
Creativity
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13
Good day everyone!
Why not start writing a blog here. .. Perhaps it's time.
There are quite a lot of works that I want to talk about, so I'll start in order.
Earlier, my husband and I have already flashed here and there.
About a year ago the question arose - what to give to a friend who collects hippos? Of course, the hippopotamus! Yes, not just a hippopotamus, but a hippopotamus in the form of a pot for a succulent (the plant is so medium-sized, they do not require a large volume of the pot, they are unpretentious, photo below). There is a zd-printer - we will print. Both lively and original.
Then I downloaded the model from the well-known portal of free models. I modified it a little, made the hippo thicker, lower, did some magic in Magics and the pot came out. Then my husband and I decided that he needed a couple, let them have more fun.
Cross-sectional hippopotamus:
Printed in pla produced by FD-Plast.
Big hippo size 25x11x13 cm, smaller one 20 cm long.
I decided to revive them by painting them with metal-like acrylics. This paint is artistic, everything was painted with a brush, it is unfortunately not moisture resistant (the surface became slippery, the paint did not peel off, there were no modifications after drying, so the idea was not abandoned) and subsequent printed models were then varnished (solved the problem).
The result is a pair of hippos:
After posting photos of pots on instagram, a pair of hippos (but no longer pots) left for Taganrog, which gave motivation to master Sculptris. I will talk about this later.
Closing the topic of printing hippos, I'll post one more. During pla printing, overheating of the all-metal thermal barrier caused a jam and gaps in the middle of printing the model. A drop of oil on the plastic would have saved the situation, but who would have known about it then ... I had to repair what was printed. I patched it with artistic embossed primer, made the surface of a hippopotamus with such a uniform surface like shagreen, painted it with mother-of-pearl acrylic and varnished it:
Thank you for your attention :)
Some of my works can be seen at the Masters Fair and on Instagram.
To be continued...
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Greetings to the readers of the portal! I would like to present one more work made by me and my wife, and. ..
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Unusual pots for succulents with your own hands
05/12/2021
Created by: Ivan Sobolev
I have long been going to talk about the technology of making my pots. In this article I will describe in detail how you can make them yourself.
Pots are made from polymer composite in several steps.
1. Modeling
First, the pot needs to be designed taking into account the laws of physics and the peculiarities of printing a 3D printer. To do this, you will need a 3D modeling program and skills to work with it. Then you simply draw the image that has been formed in your head for a long time and does not come out of it. You can take a ready-made model of a pot, for example, on the site thingiverse.com. But in my opinion, the most interesting thing is to use the opportunity to translate your idea into an object that exists in the real world. Therefore, even a simple, but my own project is more significant for me than a complex someone else's.
2. Matrix printout
It is necessary to prepare and set up a 3D printer. This is one of the most creative parts of the process. Due to the large number of moving parts, 3D printers are quite complex and capricious devices. Therefore, refeeding/setting up the printer may take an unexpectedly long time. The good news is that for the manufacture of a pot, it is necessary to print not a finished product with a high-quality surface, but a "carrier matrix" for impregnation. Therefore, an average (draft) print quality is acceptable, which can be produced by almost any 3D printer.
If you have already learned how to work with the printer, the printout itself will not cause problems. Any plastic can be used to print the matrix. I mostly use white PLA as it is the easiest to print with.
3. Hand finishing
After printing it is necessary to remove the supports and all unnecessary, and assemble the model if it consists of several parts. Large gaps must be sealed.
Next, prepare the epoxy putty with which we will cover the matrix. You will need any epoxy resin with a hardener, filler, dry dark dye.
In order for the epoxy to thickly cover the matrix and not drip, I add a filler. Glass microspheres are well suited as a filler (a teaspoon with a slide for 10 grams of resin). The surface of putty with such filler is well processed. I also add dye. With black dye, gray putty is clearly visible on white plastic and you can determine where the model has not yet been coated with putty, what is the thickness of the layer, or where the putty has been strongly absorbed and more needs to be added.
Mix the resin, filler and dye well, trying not to have lumps of filler. Then stir well again.
Add the hardener, stir very well and apply the putty with a small stiff brush, well smearing hard-to-reach places. Remove the excess with a brush. If you guessed right with the amount filled, the surface will smooth out before the resin hardens.