Make a Caffeine Necklace With Mixee Lab’s 3D Printed Molecule Jewelry
Mixee Labs Keeps on Redefining 3D Printed Jewelry with Molecules Series
Mixee Labs, the 3D printing startup that has brought to market their clever web creators for jewelry, cufflinks, dog bone tags, slim wallets, and figurines, has a new product line: molecules.
“I’m proud to announce our new molecular jewelry line, available starting today!” said Mixee Labs co-founder Nancy Yi Liang. “People can order from a list of our favorite molecule structures, or search for molecules of their choice (to 3D print) using online molecular databases. Get a fashionable take on the world’s favorite molecules–coffee, love, chocolate, and whichever molecule represents you!
These molecular accessories are 3D printed in a variety of materials. You can go colorful in matte, nylon plastic. You can tweak the thickness of the atoms and bonds to add a personal touch. Create minimal molecular structures or plump beady designs!
“Maybe steampunk your collection with 3D printed stainless steel, or go high-end with sterling silver and gold plated brass,” says Nancy Yi Liang.
These designs will start at $10 for nylon plastic, $60 for stainless steel, and $160 for sterling silver and gold-plated brass. Each design will take about 2-3 weeks to 3D print and ship.
Get started designing your own molecule jewelry at https://www.mixeelabs.
You can choose from:
- Caffeine
- Serotonin (regulates mood and sleep)
- Adrenaline
- Vitamin C
- Sucrose (table sugar)
- Dopamine (happiness neurotransmitter)
- Theobromine (chocolate! yumm..)
- Testosterone
- Estrogen
- Aspirin
- Ritalin
- Nicotine
- Xanax
- Viagra
- THC
Also check out the photos below to see how the final products look.
Will 3D Scanners Usher in a New Era of Copyright Infringement?
Legal Expert Michael Weinberg Explores the Implications of More Accessible and Inexpensive 3D Scanners
This is a guest post by Michael Weinberg, whose bio is at the end of the article.
Q: Will 3D Scanners Usher in a New Era of Copyright Infringement?
A: No.
Tied into our current 3D printing boom is a second, equally interesting one: an explosion of accessible 3D scanners. As you may be able to guess from the name, 3D scanners can take physical objects and turn them into digital files. Once you have digitized an object you can modify it, share it over the internet, and/or print it out with a 3D printer.
Like 3D printers, 3D scanners are not new technology. Companies have been making expensive, high quality scanners for years. These scanners could be used to quickly create digital replicas of things like buildings, entire neighborhoods, or even fossilized whale bones that are accurate down to the centimeter (or millimeter). But, also like 3D printers, recent years have started to see low cost, pretty-good scanners enter the market.
There huge variety in these scanners. Microsoft’s Kinect has been hacked and turned into a 3D scanner. 123D Catch from Autodesk can turn a series of regular, 2D photographs into a 3D model. Makerbot has released their own 3D scanner (well, sort of their second 3D scanner), and Kickstarter is chock-a-block full of handheld 3D scanners, desktop 3D scanners, and dongles that turn your phone or tablet into a 3D scanner. Back in 2011 we even did a podcast interview with the inventor of Trimensional, an iPhone app that used light from the iPhone’s own screen to create a 3D model.
All of which is to say that pretty soon anyone who wants access to a reasonably high quality 3D scanner will have one. In fact, anyone with a smart phone in their pocket will have one whether they want it or not.
A Crisitunity?
Most people will see this as an exciting opportunity. Imagine if on your next vacation, instead of just taking a picture of yourself next to the Elgin Marbles you scan them so you can print them out at home. Or going to a botanical garden, scanning a bouquet worth of flowers, and mixing them into a 3D printed statue for your sweetheart. Being able to capture the world in 3D will present us all with incredible opportunities.
Of course, some people will see this new technology as a crisis. They will worry that being able to copy objects means being able to copy objects without permission. And that could mean infringing on copyright (of course in many cases the objects being copied will not actually be protected by copyright, but let’s set that aside right over here for now). They will conclude that this type of technology is just too dangerous to be freely available, and insist on some combination of digital and legal restrictions that make it much less useful and much easier to control.
A Dumb Response
This type of response is, in a word, dumb. Yes, it is true that 3D scanners can copy physical objects. And it is true that some of those physical objects will be protected by copyright (or patent). And, furthermore, it is true that some of those protected objects will be copied without permission, therefore infringing on their respective copyrights and patents.
But that alone is not enough to build a case to restrict them. After all, you can say pretty much the same thing about digital 2D cameras. Digital cameras make copies of all sorts of copyright-protected things every day. Many of those copies are made without permission. And, at least on some level, that is a problem.
But no one would suggest that the correct response to that problem is to build limitations into digital cameras. Or hold digital camera manufacturers responsible for copyright infringement. There is no reason to treat 3D scanners any differently.
So enjoy those 3D scanners. Use them responsibly. Or at least as responsibly as you use your 2D camera. And if someone starts freaking out about how 3D scanners will somehow mean the end of intellectual property as we know it, tell them to take a deep breath. Sit them down. Scan their face. Turn it into a 3D printed mug and fill that mug with whatever liquid you think will best help them to relax.
About the author: Michael Weinberg is a Vice President at Public Knowledge, a public interest advocacy group focused on digital issues based in Washington, DC.
Related articles:
- Radiant Fabrication Wants to Be the iTunes of 3D Printing
- Fuel3D Handheld 3D Scanner Closes in on $300,000 Kickstarter Funding
- MakerBot Digitizer Desktop 3D Scanner Goes On Sale for $1400, Video from Bre
- 3D Scanning for 3D Printing: How Kickstarter is Changing the Game
- Video: Burning Man Team Offers 3D Prints of Burners in the Desert
- Do The Mutation: 3D Printed Masks Take Art to a New Level of Personal
- The MakerBot Met Hackathon Spreads with Art Derivations
Top 3D Printing News Last Week: Retail, Inventors, Interviews, More
3D Printing News
Here is a roundup of the top 3D printing news from September 16 to September 22.
We attended the Inside 3D Printing conference & expo in San Jose, where we interviewed 3D Systems Avi Reichental and covered many of the sessions. Some of the highlights included the 10 principles of 3D printing and how personalization will change retail.
In other news, consolidation in the space continued as Lagoa acquired browser-based 3D modeling tool 3DTin.
Tuesday, September 17
- Inventor of 3D Printing Scott Crump: “My Dreams Started in a Garage”
- The Future of Retail is Personalization – Isaac Katz on 3D Printing
- 10 Principles of 3D Printing – Presentation by Melba Kurman
Wednesday, September 18
- Watch the Top 3D Printing Exhibits at Inside 3D Printing San Jose (Video)
- 3D Systems CEO Video Interview: A Leader’s Perspective on 3D Printing
Friday, September 20
Saturday, September 21
Exclusive: Rip, Mix, Burn Gets Physical with 3D Printing Startup Matter.io
“If 3D printing is ever going to cross over into consumer applications, there needs to be some radical new thinking about 3D design” — Dylan Reid, CEO of Matter.io
Cambridge, MA based Matter.io is looking for beta testers to try out their new 3D editing tool Matter Remix. Read below for our exclusive promotion code that will get you free registration.
The company, founded earlier this year by MIT and Cornell alums, aims to bring Instagram-like ease to 3D modeling and 3D printing. The team has ambitious plans to create a “modeling layer” on top of the the world’s 3D content but is starting with a standalone web application for “remixing” existing STLs.
“There seems to be a consensus that simple content creation is the biggest bottleneck to consumer 3D printing,” said Dylan Reid, co-founder and CEO of Matter.io. “But for all the talk, there’s surprisingly little innovation. Simple geometric modelers have been around since the inception of computer aided design and digital sculpting tools have been used by the entertainment industry for over a decade. We believe that if 3D printing is ever going to cross over into consumer applications, there needs to be some radical new thinking about 3D design.”
Radical Thinking and Instagram Inspiration
This “radical thinking” is driving their design principles. Reid and his team observed that there are currently three major buckets of design software:
- High end 3D modelers – expensive desktop software that is really complicated to use and have a steep learning curve, but provides highly precise 3D models; examples include Blender, Maya, and 3D Studio Max
- Basic geometry kits – desktop or online tools that let a user play with polygons in a quick and easy fashion, but take some real effort to design anything with aesthetic value; examples include Tinkercad and Sketchup
- 3D sculpting tools – software that lets you push and pull a digital ball of clay in 3D which makes for interesting creative designs but it’s difficult to get millimeter precision; examples include Leopoly and Sculpteo
Content creation is hard because CAD is hard, Reid explained. What users really want is the Instagram experience: simple input that creates designs with high precision and aesthetic value.
“Our ultimate goal is to be able to match people’s inherent creativity and taste with tools that will let them materialize their ideas in physical form,” said Reid. “We’ve taken our greatest inspiration from 2D design tools and think there’s a lot of lessons to be learned from their evolution. At one point photo editing was something only a small group of people engaged in and now with Instagram and Aviary, it’s something nearly all of us have contact with.”
He continued, “What’s magical about photo filters, that is completely missing from the 3D world, is the ability to make meaningful transformations with the click of a button. As we look beyond where we are now, into the future of personal fabrication, we see a lot more 3D design working this way: reducing complex functionalities to the click of a button or the push of a slider bar.”
Exclusive Invitation to Designers and 3D Printing Enthusiasts
Starting today, Matter.io is opening up Matter Remix to a small number of users as part of a closed Beta.
Matter.io has given us an exclusive registration code: ON3DP. Use that code and the company promises that you will never pay for the online tool and your account stays active after they close down registration.
If you get involved, share your thoughts on Matter Remix with us in the comments or on Twitter with @On3DPrinting!
On 3D Printing Selected as Hardware Startups Resource on FounderDating
On 3D Printing has grown over the last few years to one of the most followed and most read publication in the 3D Printing industry. FounderDating has recognized On 3D Printing as a key resource for hardware startups and added the site to its member resources page.
FounderDating is a network of talented entrepreneurs with different backgrounds and skill sets all ready to start their next company or project. The organization helps entrepreneurs find co-founders with complementary skill sets.
“What could be more important than connecting with amazing entrepreneurs that could be your cofounder? Don’t hesitate,” said 500 Startups investor Dave McClure in an endorsement for FounderDating.
In August, the site launched FounderDating Hardware to help hardware entrepreneurs find the right people to get started on side projects and companies.
Start a Hardware Side Project or Company
FounderDating recently launched FounderDating Hardware in partnership with Tech Shop and PCH International for you to find the right people to start with! FounderDating is an invite-only online network of entrepreneurs – 50% engineers and 100% high quality – all ready to get started on something new.
Join by the upcoming Hardware deadline of September 27 and learn more at FounderDating’s hardware site.