Tag Archives: Mixee Labs

Mixee Labs Launches 3D Printed Slim Wallet Creator

Mixee Labs Slim Wallet

Mixee Labs, a 3D printing startup that lets you create customized 3D printed figurines, cufflinks, and jewelry, has launched a new product, the Slim Wallet.

Slim Wallet is a thin and customizable 3d printed wallet. The wallet is under 1cm thin, and can be used it to hold 3 credit cards, driver’s license, a metro card, and some cash and keys.

What makes this product unique is that it is fully functional straight from the 3D printer. The clasps that holds everything in the wallet cleverly takes advantage of the flexibility and strength of 3d printed nylon plastic. Simply lift up the clasp, slide in your cards in, and everything snaps into place.

This wallet is designed by nxt3d with artwork by Bona Kim.

On Mixee Labs, people can choose from a variety of patterns and embellishments, and even upload their own images or text. More pictures and information on the product page: https://www.mixeelabs.com/creator/slim-wallet.

Mixee Labs Slim Wallet Mechanism

Top 3D Printing News Last Week: 3D Printing Conference, Ellen Page, Much More

3D printing news

3D Printing News

A roundup of the top 3D printing news from July 8 to July 14:

Monday, July 8

Tuesday, July 9

Wednesday, July 10

Thursday, July 11

Friday, July 12

 Saturday, July 13

3D Printing Startup Mixee Labs Launches Customizable 3D Printed Cufflinks

Mixee Labs 3D Printed Cufflinks

Mixee Labs Launches 3D Printed Cufflinks

Mixee Labs is the 3D printing startup behind customizable figurine platform Mixee Me and a customizable jewelry platform launched in June. Mixee Labs’ products were featured as Time Magazine’s Top 10 3D Printed Gifts of the year in 2012.

Now Mixee Labs has a new product: 3D printed cufflinks.

Using Mixee Labs, anybody can design their own cufflinks. You can select from a variety of different designs or even upload your own black and white graphic. Want cufflinks of your favorite team logo or your initials? Mixee Lab’s custom cufflink creator is perfect for you.

Mixee Labs manufactures each product on demand using 3D printed stainless steel (with optional gold or bronze plating) for $60, 3D printed sterling silver for $160, and 3D printed nylon plastic for $20.

3D printing is not limited to plastics, and Mixee Labs is taking full advantage of the wide variety of materials with this product. Each stainless steel or plastic pair will take about 2 weeks to print and ship; each silver pair will take about 3 weeks to ship.

Here’s a photo gallery to show how the creation process works and showcases some final cufflink designs.

 

We sat down with Nancy Yi Liang, co-founder of Mixee Labs for an interview.

On 3D Printing: First figurines, then jewelry, now cufflinks. Seems like you are building a full catalog of 3D printed goods. Tell us more about your expansion strategy.

Nancy Yi Liang: Eventually, we want to be a destination for customized, rapidly manufactured products. The cufflinks are built with our modeler’s platform (not yet released). The idea is you can upload a base model STL, like a cufflink, and specify a given surface for the user to add embellishments via extruded text or graphics. Unlike the Javascript platform we launched a while back, this platform doesn’t require a designer to know how to code.

On 3D Printing: These cufflinks are in stainless steel, right? What have you learned about working with that material?

Nancy Yi Liang: Stainless Steel is a great material–it has a real vintage-looking, raw quality to it. Moreover, you can coat it with gold and bronze, giving it some polish. A big part of designing for Stainless Steel is understanding structural strength. There’s a part of the 3d printing process (called the “greenstate”) where the model is not yet infused with bronze, and is actually quite fragile. During this stage, any thin parts of the model that is not well supported can break. In general, designing for 3d printing is very much about understanding the production process. “3d printing” actually covers a wide variety of production techniques (laser sintering, powder binding layer by layer with glue, jets extruding molten plastic). Each material employes different techniques and thus have different design restrictions. Shapeways provides excellent guides on designing for each material (hehe.. patting myself on the back a little since I wrote that section back when I was at Shapeways).

On 3D Printing: What’s been the biggest surprise about 3D printing jewelry and accessories?

Nancy Yi Liang: You know, sometimes people just want to put their names on things. I originally designed this with the mindset that people will want to upload all sorts of fancy graphics. But when I asked my friends who wear cufflinks, a lot of them got very excited when I told them that they can put their initials on the product. So ok, we added a custom text field to the cufflink creator. Right now, we are just beginning to venture into this space, so I’m sure there’s a lot more surprises coming down the road–we just need to keep our eyes and ears sharp!

Go to Mixee Labs to create your own custom cufflinks or other 3D printed jewelry.

Top 10 Countdown: Most Popular 3D Printing Stories in June 2013

Buccaneer 3D Printer Profile

Here are the top 10 most popular stories On 3D Printing brought you in June 2013.

10. Buttercup the Duck Gets 3D Printed Prosthetic Foot and a Facebook Page

9. 3D Printing Startup Mixee Labs Expands Portfolio with Artisan Jewelry Launch and Platform

8. Amazon.com Launches Extensive 3D Printing Category

7. MakerBot Celebrates Dads and Grads with 3D Printing Deals

6. SupplyBetter Launches 3D Printing Comparison Engine to Give Designers More Choice

5. Watershed Moment: Windows 8.1 Offers Native Support for 3D Printing

4. Full Analysis of the Stratasys and MakerBot 3D Printing Acquisition

3. Modibot Defeats All 3D Printed Action Heroes on Kickstarter

2. MakerBot Acquired by Stratasys for $403 Million

1. Buccaneer 3D Printer Closes Epic Kickstarter Campaign Raising $1.4 Million

 

Thanks for reading in June!

Top 3D Printing News Last Week: Amazon, Mixee Labs, Chicago Conference

Inside 3D Printing Chicago Guitar

Greg Diamond of 3D Systems plays a 3D printed guitar in the exhibit hall of Inside 3D Printing Conference in New York City.

3D Printing News

A roundup of the top 3D printing news from June 10 to June 16:

Wednesday, June 12

Thursday, June 13

Saturday, June 15