Yearly Archives: 2012
Fashion On Demand: 3D Printed Shoes by Melissas
Using flexible, proprietary plastics called Melflex, Melissas’ shoes are created on demand using 3D printing technology.
Fashion? Yes, fashion.
This example provides a glimpse of the future – how 3D printing will pervade every industry and change the way we manufacture consumer products. Imagine walking into a shoe store, picking out a style, getting your feet measured and then having shoes made to order while you sit comfortably with a glass of cucumber water and a magazine. It will happen.
Read more about Melissas’ shoes experiments in Green Fashion.
BumpyPhoto Uses 3D Printing to Bring Digital Photos to Life

Want your digital photos to come to life? Try BumpyPhoto, a new service that combines photo and 3D printing for unique results.
How does it work? You upload your flat photo file and BumpyPhoto’s skilled designers create a 3D depthmap based on the colors and contours or your image. Then, using 3D printing technology, a 3D relief sculpture is made that brings your subjects to life.
Here is a video showing the process and results.
Try it out for yourself at BumpyPhoto.com.
3D Printed Nano Objects: New World Record for Micro Printing

A team from the Vienna University of Technology set a new world record this week: 3D printed nano objects in just 4 minutes. Their process, called two-photon lithography, uses a focused laser to harden liquid resin.
Applications? Consider how this process could be used to make micro objects for biomedical research and treatment.
Photo above is a human figure smaller than a grain of sand. Photo below is a detailed cathedral about 50 microns in length.
Read more and see additional photos at Reuters’ World in Nano.

3D Printing Accelerates Development of a Race Car

Prodrive‘s 3D printing success story shows how functional prototypes and rapid tooling can significantly speed up the development of a race car.
“3D printing is an important part of our design and development process that has massively reduced our reaction time,” said Prodrive chief design engineer Paul Doe. “The technology allows us to produce new parts for the test car within hours of a problem or need being discovered.”
With 3D printing technology, the team can quickly test new ideas without the large cost of retooling production equipment. The prototypes that are “printed” are production ready, reducing time traditionally spent creating new parts and testing them sequentially. In fact, the cost of this development effort was 1/5 the size of a comparable project not using 3D printing.
Read more about this announcement here.









