Shapeways is Teaching 3D Printing for Free

Shapeways has figured out that the more people know how to use the 3D technology, the more customers they will have. So they have just uploaded a course call “Introduction to 3D printing: From Concept to Porduct.”

It is on the Skillshare learning management system and is free. There are 7 video lessons. It is located here:

it promises that”This class will teach you exactly how to model a 3D hand-held, print-ready, object using only free tools, with no prior experience necessary.” I am planning to take it and see what I learn.

Afro Babies arrived!

My little Afro Babies prototype arrived and it is too cute!

The issues I see are: the stick on the sign was broken. This means the sign and the figure should not be printed together. Rather, the design should be broken up to have the sign inserted in her hands. Also, at the cost of $15 to be printed, I would have to sell it for about 24.99. For a little 3 inch figure that seem high.

Also, the sandstone feels coarse, as it should, but I wonder if it will be what people expect, especially if they don’t know that with 3D printing that is the only material that allows full color production. Or is it?

I need to do more research on the 3D manufacturing process and check out the company that I think is in business of making custom made 3D printed dolls to see what I can learn.

Overall Personal Reflection

I knew nothing except what the printers looked like and what output they could produce before I started the course. I did not know the players in the game nor the major users of the technology. I did not know how to get started with the process. I did not know that CAD modelers were integral to the process. I did not know that individuals could get their products made through the major 3D printing companies. I did not know about the software that was available for the users. I did not know about the .stl and other files that were needed to be โ€œreadโ€ by the 3D printers. I did not know that the printing companies would also handle order taking and shipping fulfillment for products made through them.

I did not know there was a community of designers available to create 3D models for your projects. I did not know about 3D scanning. What I learned, I shared with the class on the final presentation:

1. Software knowledge is King/Queen!
2. There will be more issues then you plan for.
3. 3D designing will be harder than you think.
4. Donโ€™t get too attached to your design, you may have to change it.
5. Make sure you have time to process and fix your design.
6. Put your design through the software that will highlight the mistakes before you go to print.
7. The open source community and culture has many benefits. It provides opportunities for design help and problem solving.

My strengths were that I understood traditional manufacturing so I had a good basis of comparison and it contributed to my amazement with this course.

The advice I would give myself is to not try to be a designer. When I had my toy company, I hired designers. It is not a skill or talent you can learn easily and it is not a talent I have. I appreciate designers and know how to work with them. But, CAD design is extremely complex and requires a tremendous amount of knowledge, craft and time to develop.

I see creating an online 3D course. I am looking at Udemy.com for developing a short course. I also see myself having a 3D printed toy line by 2014. If that goes well, I will develop other products.

Area of Expertise Findings

The reason I took this course was to learn about how to manufacture toys using 3D printing. I viewed it as a way to avoid all the old manufacturing process with which I was familiar. Namely, expensive injection molding, large minimum order quantities, warehousing of inventory, manufacturing in China and those long, dreaded flights to the factories, posting of letters of credit, sales call to major retailers, just-in-time shipping orders and 30-60-90 day payment cycles.

Then I read about 3D printing. It seemed to be everything traditional injection molding was not. It allowed for manufacturing only one product at a time. This technology eliminated one of the biggest cost and uncertainties in mass production: minimum production quantities. Moreover, multiple designs can be created and tested because the design process takes place in the software. It is the computer animated design (CAD) process that makes 3D printing so unique when compared to the traditional manufacturing process.

Production with 3D printing is accessible because of the services surrounding the industry that contribute to its adoption. When the speaker came from Shapeways, he explained that they have a community where 3D CAD modelers are available to work for hire on projects.

That was the information I needed in order to pursue my goal of creating 3D printed toys. All I had was a design and an idea. But, I was unable to take the concept to the next level. However, once I knew there was a community of CAD experts, I knew I would be able to develop the toy.

My work raises questions about mass customization and whether I will be able to market the toy allowing the words on the sign to change, and to offer a selection on the colors of the clothes.

For the larger community, if I am able to successfully manufacture the toys in the U.S. I will use that as a marketing tool and be able to evangelize this process to others. Now, when I talk about 3D printing the first reference most people have is that 3D is good for making guns. These toys and the publicity they generate can help change that.

The next step is to send the product to Shapeways and get a prototype and begin to test market the acceptance and audience for the toys.

A Really “Techy” Update from the Afro Babies’ Modeler, Santiago, in Spain

Santiago wrote:
I have been taking care of an added issue I was not aware of due to my novice-ness with the specific area of 3D printing. I don’t know if you benefit from knowing certain technical details as a part of your 3D print learning course. But here I go :). I have consulted some experts in this Full Color Sandstone material and related matters, turns out that other materials would allow -in Shapeways company- to have objects overlapping. That is, one volume incrusted in the other. So, initially this weekend I got super happy, as I thought I was going to need to modify several areas and make what is called a boolean (of the ‘union’ type. Two meshes get joined physically by connecting polygons. Nothing is “loose” or not connected) or a weld of some sort. Seems in the case when you make another model in other material, this is not necessary. IE: The afro hair can be a separate object can be set over the model’s head, I would not need to join it. As I wouldn’t need for any other purpose 3D model (although depends on the targeted game or software) . Because, the Shapeways system, I think its software platform, performs a great automatic boolean union (there’s intersect or subtract boolean operations, too, in the 3D “language”. Union is the most common boolean, though). This saves tons of time.

Unluckily, the only material not allowing this is Full Color Sandstone. As it seems the textures color information gets lost with a boolean union. Or it did some time ago (they might have improved, certain artist told me) . Anyway, this, and the also recently discovered -by me- fact that a model cannot have more than 1 million triangles (triangular polygons, that is) in the Shapeways platform, has had me making lots of internal changes on the model. Visually you would not practically notice, indeed, non in the outside shell (in what we see) of the hair. ๐Ÿ™‚

So, with this extremely helpful feedback about the FCS material, and some other tech aspects of Shapeways production, I’m quite more confident on what the model cannot have once sent to Shapeways. ๐Ÿ™‚

Yes, texturing now should be a breeze, is the easiest part in this specific model. I would like to end it all today. ๐Ÿ™‚

I hope I did not get too “techy” in this mail. Also, I hope it adds value for your 3D print learning course.

Me: I had to go look up “boolean.” I was familiar with it as a search term method when conducting specific research, but did not know it had a connection to modeling. This is what I read:

Boolยทeยทan
[boo-lee-uhn] S
adjective
1.
pertaining to or being a deductive logical system, as Boolean algebra, used to represent symbolically the relationships between sets, classes, and other entities.
2.
Computers. of or pertaining to a data type having two possible values representing โ€œtrueโ€ or โ€œfalse.

I guess he’s talking about the data.

I wrote him back:

This information is very helpful. We are all writing blogs to outline our process with our personal project. I have been sharing our conversations with the professors and the students and will post this email as well.

Thank you for being so expressive and instructional!

I look forward to the next models.

The Afro Babies’ Hair is an Afro!

AB.1

I have been back and forth with Santiago regarding the hair on the Afro Babies. He has explained how difficult it is to design in the software and he switched to a different software package to get the look I was trying to get. Here is the exchange we have had:

Me: I had these Lego toys that have little Afros. They have the bumps that you started with, but there are many more of them. It may be difficult to recreate this in 3D. Therefore, some combination of the spikes and the bumps should work.

I appreciate all the work you are doing and the difficulty involved.

Thanks for your persistence!

Santiago: What I can do is reproduce some type of filament, curvy, thick pipes.

But actual thin hair, while it is possible in 3D software via plugins/added modules effects, it is not in 3D printed figures, with any material (not even hi detail ones). But specially, the multicolored stone, as I mentioned to you in its day, is very limited. It cannot do even slightly thin structures. And gravity and support strength are a real problem. In the guidelines, they explain to you that it is like making sand castles in the beach. Whatever would not be possible in that, wont be either with multicolored sandstone, as would get destroyed once they extract from the machine (later they apply like a a super glue adhesive)

So, we can, as much, do some sort of filaments, in the case the hair is not all left to 2D texture flat painting.

You might want to check these matters in their material guidelines page ๐Ÿ™‚ :

http://www.shapeways.com/materials/sandstone-design-guidelines

There is important info not showing there, which is at the main info page:

http://www.shapeways.com/materials/sandstone

This also tells about how fragile it is. It is not going to break for time to time handling, thanks to the super glue, but is for example, not good for a table top game, is mostly a decoration piece.

I indeed might be extremely interested in, if you are so kind, that once you receive the model, might tell me how it feels, how strong it seems to be and all… As , for me as a modeler… and texturer, I have an edge, an advantage with most modelers there in Shapeways as many are not capable of texturing also (properly). But sadly this is the only material allowing it. Still …for deco purposes, they say it rocks.

I am producing a “multi style” head hair, so you can check several samples in the same head, so to make a choice of what we can do.

Me: Sorry I was not clear. I am not in New York now. I came to Maryland to visit with friends for the Thanksgiving holiday. When I get back I will try to sketch what I am thinking and scan it and send it to you.

In the meantime, I will see the section that you are changing and maybe it is what I am looking for.

I understand the constraints you listed and am sure we will find some compromise.

Thanks again for being so responsive.

Santiago: It’s been a bit of an issue to get the desired effect, as mostly I need to prevent issues when the molding proccess starts in their machines. Figures must be solids of certain characteristics, and this is limitting me in going for easier methods for the several hair versions. Finally I needed to make an export from Wings, and I have generated the full hair with Blender, using its METABALLS system. It was the best way to model it , and keep all time everything as one piece, and not make a nightmare of later on melting all. The thing is, we cannot do separated pieces for 3D printing of certain type. It’s be really tedious, as I have placed and configured each small metaball of “lego hair” individually… Quite a task… But am happy now ๐Ÿ™‚ . It almost killed a i7 core with 8gb of ram and a good graphic card! ๐Ÿ™‚ Half a million of triangles…

Good news: I just got it ready now, hair is done, and now I am going for the final thing: texturing.

It’s a huge file in modeling count, but my machine can deal with it more or less (+600 thousand triangles in the hair, lol) . Mostly as if hair is good (I really like it now, but I don’t know if you would, I really hope so!. I think it is completely in the line that you wanted in those lego samples: It’s hard for a better aproach, and in my view, it ended better than in those lego examples.)

The delay has been a mix of things: Yes, the hair styling, not reaching the point you exactly wished, was a bit of a slowing down factor, but is mostly that.. I am these late months making a living out of my artwork, as the only income source, so, when a project needs certain number of modifications, I do not charge for them, but I actually need to also attend the other projects as well, so to (er, pay the bills ๐Ÿ˜‰ ) not loose them, and also for schedules. I am hoping to end it all today, so it will be good for your classes, as well. ๐Ÿ™‚ Yes, there have appeared more obstacles than I thought, I mentioned you it was my first contact with real physical figure printing… The bigger issue here, and I can explain that in depth if you really wish so, is that I cannot make, as far as my little knowledge on 3D printing and materials go, figures built of several parts, or can, but it would involve certain extra complexities with their tech services. I am quite expecting issues when we do send this model to their services, because it often hapens, also I am novice in the specific matter, and also, the model has some singularities. But I am optimistic in the final result of all, and of course, I will be extremely helpful with you and the service to make this reach the desired output. Things can happen: They can reject the model, even several times, as once they examine the model they might estimate that issues would occure during the machine operation or another step. I will try to clean the model the best I can, and eliminate possible issues before sending, but still, these matters are expected. I’ll be there to change anything.

Not attaching here the shot as I need to do certain things first, but expect a final shot today ๐Ÿ™‚

I am sorry for the delay, but this is going to end as a nice figure ๐Ÿ™‚

Me:
Great to hear from you and that the problem was not me:) !

Looking forward to getting your next design.

Santiago: I’m a bit in a hurry right now, but so that you could check a bit of it… Is not the actual exact colors from the initial drawing that you sent me, as these are not textures yet, but actually just basic material colors. But to give an idea. In 3D, one can’t see volume in typical LCD screens if we set as black the hair color. In the final model, yes, it will be black, because in real life, the natural light wll allow to see the hair volumes and all.

As it’s no textures, this is why we yet don’t see the face (eyes, smile, etc) This will be in the texture. ๐Ÿ™‚ The names that you want to go changing in the sign: textures, and very easy to add it ๐Ÿ™‚

So, hair does not need to be dark brown, can be full black.

I am at step four of my original plan. I am pleased with the look and the progress.

Santiago is now going to start on the face.My plan is to mass customize the toy. I will make a boy and a girl figure and possible two hair styles, one bumpy and one spiky. The sign is where the customization will occur.

I will find out the limitations of how many characters can be printed in the space and allow people to write in those characters when they order. My vision is the Afro Babies will be holding “greetings”. Some may say “I love (or have a “heart” image) and add in a name. One may say “Happy Birthday _your name inserted____. Or “Get well, “Congratulations”, etc.

Since these will be 3D printed, each buyer can add their own words. I have already checked with the designer, such that the sign portion can be customized.

There is more to learn than .STL

Iโ€™m learning that 3D printers read more than .STL files. According to Santiago, my 3D model designer, a different type of file is needed for the Afro Babies.

I continue to be fascinated with the knowledge one must have to proceed to final production in the 3D printing world. Note Santiagoโ€™s email below:

โ€œSketchup is a very good piece of software, although more focused in architecture and non organic modeling.

I do use Wings3D ( wings3d.com ) , completely free software (even more than Sketchup). Is valid for most types of modeling. Although is not very good for really (very) high polygon count meshes.

It is not as easy as Sketchup, but is neither as complex as the also free Blender. Blender is not just a modeler, like these two. Blender is a full, complete general 3D application that allows animating, rendering, texturing, etc. I use it too, but I prefer Wings3D for modeling.

As installing and etc might bring you some problems, and wanted to ensure that you actually see the angles, I have taken the freedom of adding here several angles screenshots.

I have made quite some editing: Improving the hands, doing some joinings in the palms with the sign (as it is now in the air, and anyway needs to be attached to the figure). Improving hair shape and volume (please, don’t worry about not showing the hair bumps (“curls”) yet: I prefer to let that as final step, as it looks better if done once fully subdivided, which is done at the end. It’s easy to do, also.) Other than that… I am now at night here, tomorrow morning I would like to do the texturing (the final step, the more spectacular one). I shortened the sign as you requested, but let me know if want the length to be different. That is extremely easy to change.

Also, I am almost sure that Shapeways technicians will ask for some changes, as it depends on each material, how it melt, walls consistency, etc, that modeling might be needed to be slightly modified in some details. I will do freely any change they would need being made, so that the figure ends cool. ๐Ÿ™‚

Also, about the *.stl format that you mention in the contract. Sandstone multicolor material can only work with other formats: VRML97 (vrml 2.0) or X3D. I’ll probably export it in the first one. The reason behind this is because STL does not support textures, thus, it would never be used for the only multi colored material. You will probably wish to change the contract in this aspect, but the contract or payment is my latest concern now. I want to provide you with the figure first.โ€

Then he sent me the following design updates:
hair-1

afrobabies8

angle1

angle-2

angle-3

angle-4

angle-5

angle-6

angle-7

angle-8

angle-9

hair_14

hair_14b

hair_14c

hair_14d

hair_14e

hair_14f

It’s all about the hair right now. I don’t want it as spikey as it is, but not as smooth or bumby as the other designs. I am looking for something more in between. I will communicate with Santiago that I need the spikes filled in just so small peaks extend from the Afro. Ah, the challenges of working with a designer in another country. The joys and challenges of cross country outsourcing.

CAD Designer Found!

In my last post I talked about the need to find a CAD designer/modeler to help move my personal project along. Prof. Zoe pointed out that what I had with my Afro Babies is a “drawing”AfroBabies
and it would take a designer to interpret it, model it and make a 3D character out of the drawing.

I found Santiago on the Shapeways forum and he is making the drawing come to life.
This is his first renderingafrobaby1(1)11.18.13 copy
He has taken the drawing from sitting and given it a body and shape!

I received the next iteration a few days later. afrobabies--10 - 11.20.13. 2nd model

Our next conversations have been about the Afro hairstyle. I sent him some photos showing what kind of texture I am looking for. I want it to not be as smooth as the picture, but more textured such that you can feel the grooves in the shape when you run your hands over the hair. I would like for it to be a very tactile experience – similar to this hairstyle Afro

From legal perspective, I sent him a designers contract, agreeing to pay his price of $135.00 to create the model and I sent a Non-disclosure agreement to protect the design.

The Afro Babies were created by Ken Brown who is the artist who drew Fat Albert and the Cosby Kidshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TPBj3nFirbk
He and his wife, Marie Brown, a book author’s agent, made the Afro Babies in 1972 out of wood and also created stickers. They sold them in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles, California following the riots. They were designed with positive messages that encouraged “respect” and “love” and “pride.” Ken has unfortunately passed, but I have licensed the rights to the characters from Marie.

Makerspace Blog Post

IMG_0327IMG_0317My experience in the Makerspace.
– What did you play with/make/do?
I played with the Makey-Makey software and the Little Bits electronic parts

– Why did you choose this activity?
I was intrigued by the Makey-Makey software that allowed you to control your actions on the computer using fruit, Play Doh and other objects as a mouse controller.

– Was it your first time using this technology/material?
I have a collection of little Bit electronic parts that allow me to make sound, motion and lights. This set had
different components than I have. It had a knob button controller and a devise that allowed objects to spin. It was the first time I had experienced or was aware of Makey-Makey.

– What did you like about it?
With the Makey-Makey, I liked playing the piano using the fruit and beating the drums with the Play Doh. With the Little Bits, I learned different ways to combine the electronic parts and worked with changing different items on top of the spinning mechanism.

– What did you make/create
I played some simple tunes and beat a few drums and symbols using the Makey-Makey software. I hooked up a rose to the spinning part of the Little Bits and added sound and lights to the display.

– What did you learn?
I learned that the creative team process was fun and that other students would come by and help make your experience better with their suggestions. I also found the Makey-Makey software experience fun and one that I want to return to to learn more about how it can be used. With Little Bits, I would benefit from how to use it with other materials and take on the challenge of making one of the objects that they have in their manual.

– If given more time, what would you like to play with/make/do next?
I would have tackled the Origami. While I love the designs and the possibilities to make creative shapes, I would have been able to learn something about the construction process from the design students who were at the table.