Wooden jewelry sets are created using 3D printing technology
Launched in the fall of 2012 by two former Bi-Ying Miao and Matt Compeau architects, the Toronto-based Hot Pop production of custom made jewelry has created this product with their 3D printers. .
Launched in the fall of 2012 by two former Bi-Ying Miao and Matt Compeau architects, the Toronto-based Hot Pop production of custom made jewelry has created this product with their 3D printers. .
The factory has announced two new collections: 3D printed wooden necklace and nylon 3D printed jewelery on April 30th.
This 3D print is a collection of wooden bracelets called Boreal , named after the forest in the north. Using LAYWOO-D3 wood, designers can create unique wooden jewelery with the "light scent of fire wood". It took about 42 minutes to print a product, the curves in the necklace as well as the stripes generated by the heat, like the fingerprints or the veins of the tree, the more honoring the unique. each product sample.
LAYWOO-D3 is a type of 3D wood fiber created by Kai Parthy and designed specifically for 3D models using Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM) . It is a synthetic wood fiber / polymer - containing 40% recycled wood and non-toxic polymer. The material is heat-resistant, similar to PLA, and can be printed between 175 ° C and 250 ° C.
The price for each wooden necklace is $ 130, and is considered to be unique. When a particular design is sold it means that it will permanently go away, not be re-manufactured.
A recent collection called Platonix incorporates a three-dimensional feature in the standard geometric design and features a nylon-themed design.
- Build your house using 3D printing technology without using brick
- 3D Printing Products: Autonomous Chip Decomposing
- Singapore will create houses for people with 3D printing and assembly technology like Lego
- NASA tests the first 3D printing technology in the universe
- Learn about 3D printing technology
- Build a cluster of houses with the world's first 3D printing technology in the Netherlands
- Technology of printing cells of woodblock prints with the survival rate of nearly 100%
- Diversified 3D printing materials
- Artificial diamonds and some advancements of the jeweler industry
- Uses 3D printing technology to create steel structures
Technology of growing plants in the dark World's largest digital camera ready for action China once again surprised the world when it let the humanoid robot Star1 race across the Gobi Desert. Octopus-inspired underwater sticky device Humans have been able to communicate in dreams. South Korea successfully researches the world's first 'single atom editing' technique Sweden successfully developed the world's first wooden transistor American company develops propeller-less aircraft with speed of nearly 1,000km/h