"3D printing: the cutting edge frontier. These are the creations of the 3D printing pioneers.
Their mission: to craft innovative designs, to bring ideas to life in new dimensions,
to boldly print where no object has been printed before."
Well, yeah …
After my first try at incorporating a 3D model into a hueforge background (TOS Enterprise) I've tried to make a “The Next Generation” or TNG version as well. The model is from Solid_Alexei's Ultimate Collection, the warp speed background is custom made in Illustrator and Photoshop.
I did not make the background 4:3 since I just like widescreen better 😅
To make printing easier (or more likely to not fail) I've strengthened the neck part and had to add some tree support. In my case it was relatively easy (but be careful!) to remove the support and it does not leave too much marks.
It is not a pristine finish though, of course, it's FDM after all, so I tried to make the support base as flush as possible so you could maybe sand it a little …
If you are using the one-click 3MF file on Makerworld (aka the “print profile” in the top right), all appropriate settings have been applied to the print (PLA filaments)!
Slice it, print it, done.
Well … at least sometimes, let me explain:
beware, it's taking time to calculate and I had to try countless versions with several stages of polygon reducing, mesh fixing and other voodoo so Bambu Slicer wouldn't freeze up during slicing, the provided file is -of course- the successful one …
If you are having problems, what mostly helped with avoiding Bambu Slicer from taking seemingly forever was
This way it somewhat resumes/starts from 80% and finishes without freezing.
But if someone knows a better, more reliable way, PLEASE LET ME KNOW. I've spent hours fiddling around with model re-meshing/reducing and slicing alone, it's very frustrating.
If you are not using the one-click printing method, or are not using a Bambu printer, read on:
NORMAL filament
| EFFECT filament (darker print)
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Filament I've used:
| Filament I've used:
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Notes: