Hahahaha! They will be sitting in their motorized rocking-chairs and wear VR-goggles while they design christmas-sweaters for their grandchildren in AutoCAD - using motion-sense gloves xD
@Aaron Sanders Old people today still use old stuff like books instead of iPads and cash instead of credit cards. So in the future I assume VR Goggles/iPads and 3D printers will be the "new old" book and stiching needles, and credit cards will be the "new old" payment method instead of paying with bioauthentication/DNA or something... (Unless our generation is more accepting towards evolving technology than todays elders. Which we probably are, so you might have a point afterall!)
You could make a good curtain with this if you want soft light to wake you up in the morning, floor mat if its strong enough, table cloth(if you spill, the holes drain the water), and multiple architectural structures. Its unique properties could make a cloth chair one day
The curtain idea is interesting, when you stretch it it has a lot of holes for light to come thru, when collapsed , by strings or something, it would be solid, no light thru.
Victor Rossi like a solid curtain piece on both edges and when you draw the blinds shut it pull both sides up and at the top a solid bar that pulls one edge towards the other along the top hat would collapse it so it’s tight together. Then maybe use like undeerhangs for each piece so they actually cover small gaps between
This did remind me of architecture using louvres. The last material as a window shade could be compressed from the sides to shut out more light. Also reminded me of Torggler doors.
If you re-visit this kind of thought, I suggest you look into Chain Mail, Ring Mail, and Scale Mail. Those were essentially the first real forms of metal cloth (In that it is a flexible sheet that can be 'stitched' together to form pieces like clothing and bags). And understanding the rudimentary differences in form and qualities between an Oriental 4-in-1 weave or a European 4-in-1 or European 6-in-1 could give you a pretty firm grasp on how to try to push yourself further into making different or newer forms to play with. Actually, your Triangular patterns there kind of remind me of an Oriental 3-in-1 design. Where each triangle is connected to 3 others by a linkage. I also want to say that as a Maille weaver, it made be cringe just a little bit when I saw your squared off joins and rings. learning how to do the same thing with toroid shapes would make it feel smoother on the skin in any direction that it would rub over, on either side. Also, your scales: typically, in traditional scale mail, you might find it interesting that each scale has its connection hole in the very top, and is connected from there to each of its four neighbors by a link between them. That way, as the finished piece lies flat, the linkages are hidden by the layer above. If you would like, I can point you in the direction of some Chain mailling resources that are fairly simple to delve into and understand, so you can dissect the forms of various weaves, and further understand the sizing of the rings (Both in inner diameter and thickness) affect the flexibility, durability, and such of the piece.
datstuff It's really hard to get 3D printed parts to come out actually transparent, though. Even with transparent filament, the layers and lines in which the material is deposited introduce lots of tiny gaps within the print, and the plastic-to-air transitions there create refractive interfaces. The upshot is that for anything other than "vase mode" single layer thick prints, you basically can't get transparent objects with FDM printing.
@@sociallyunactive Yep people would rather get credit for someone else's idea than to come up with it themselves, im the opposite.. its satisfying to come up with something
N BR ABS is hygroscopic like nylon. High surface area prints like these would probably absorb a noticeable amount of water. A tumble dryer would shake out some of it quite easily, the internal water vapour will take some time to dry out and probably will need a vacuum to completely dry out.
As an art teacher at the local school I think especially that self-standing fabric is interesting for teaching lighting and shadows and three dimensional drawing!
Dude... You can LITERALLY have an art gallery and make 💰 the last one standing on it's own. "Plastic blanket" with natural window sunlight casting cool shadows? Hell yeah
@@premiumboi473 I mean, that's kinda like saying people can't sell landscapes or portraits because other people have done it before them, just because other people have done artwork In a similar format doesnt mean people can't bring new ideas to the table and make a profit. If it's his own designs for the fabric there shouldn't be any issues.
@@rowbee3826 he didn't invent it though, so he can't trademark it. Also it's very likely someone already has, or there's no point as the demand doesn't match the product(not enough people want this or even care about it)
@@shadelightss never said anything about trademarking, the og comment says he should display it in an art gallery, you dont need a trademark to do that. If hes doing it his own way and not copying other designs/versions it falls under fair use
I personally liked the one the 'bowl' thing was made of... What if you'd mix using this technique and flexible material, then just remove all sharp edges, so ist more like interlocking rings instead of rectangles. Sounds like this could possibly make it a much softer fabric... Anyway very interesting and nice attempts...
wow simply amazing, i love the rigid circle with "flowy" middle, it can really demonstrate to people the extend of different things a 3D printer can do, keep being awesome!
Derek Boudreau I have the strong temptation to throw it I'm curious as to how it would fly would it fly like a frisbee how would the floppy centre interact with the air how would the ear go through the holes I really want to see this now
This is legit the very first video that actually made me want a 3D printer. Absolutely *_stellar_* job on the triangle fabric! I may or may not try to use that concept somehow.
Perhaps these "fabrics" could be used in a Hollywood movie for a future society where they make them and wear them. In other words, you can get a contract making props for a movie.
@@peterlindner3283 Sounds about right: Costumes that look awesome on camera, but are awkward to wear. And they would probably have to dub the dialogue, because the loud rustling noises will not fit with the sound design.
Space Chowder space chain mail... I wonder about the durability of such a design? The individual plates would have to be pretty thick to provide any significant protection. Although, that being said, since that could be produced via an SLS process, it might be easier to make more complex shapes, due to the absence of support concerns with SLS
Make a window shade that can make light go trough less and more by contracting the thing like when you play with it by putting it between two transparent glass/plastic and have something to push it from the bottom to make less light go through
Imagine if you had a printer with a build size of 10 feet. You could stretch them out as far as they go, glue fabric over the tops of the triangles, and you literally have a self-standing tent
I could see this being useful for military purposes, maybe printing items that are made with a Kevlar kind of material for wearable or vehicular applications.
Here's an idea off the top of my head! Would it be possible to print your quilting tiles in varying tones of the same color? I think having a "quilt" with a soft color transition waving across it would be pretty! Also I wonder if a thermally insulated blanket could be made! And I'll bet you could make some cool hats with this stuff! This is awesome! ~Arctic
Perfect! I'd envisioned a large blue "blanket" with either geometric designs of a slightly different shade or with gradual color transition throughout, like going from dark to light blue and then back across the surface. This is cool!
4:35 I love the way that looks, I'm really impressed! I could totally see printing that and connecting all the pieces together to make a big quilt, adding a soft plush quilt fabric beneath. Very, very interesting
I would so love to experiment making wearable things with your fabrics you are fantastic. I love this so much I am always looking for new fabrics I think that what you are doing here is so awesome I wonder if you can put actual fabric on the tray at the edge of the samples you print and print on to the fabric as an edge so that then I could actually seW it on a sewing machine? so you could make the printed part attach to the fabric? I would love to discuss more ideas with you
This is awesome. I think one area where these types of 3D-printed fabrics could really shine is in bags and backpacks. They don't sit against your body so they don't have to be comfortable, and they don't have to be incredibly flexible.
I could see this being used as like heavy tarps or you put on top of a tarp or a topper to a fabric top vehicle to give it a little bit of protection from above
A few of these i see a few ideas but i think you should try the flexible filament they have nowadays I myself am looking to try this since i recently purchased a 3d printer.
The amount of energy you waste constructing and assembling solar panels is pointless when you can generate far more power through nuclear. If you want clean, you can't beat nuclear.
Maybe but you'd have to try to find a material that doesn't fade in the sun and take heat. Those materials are way more expensive. Look at how curtains made from fabric will fade.
Back in my junior year of college, I took a 3D print shop class. It was really one of my favorite classes ever! For my final project, I was heavily inspired by this video to try and recreate your fabric in Rhino 3D and print it on a flashforge. It took me almost 5 tries and two weeks of tinkering, but I managed to get my own 3D fabric for my final. However, it's still not as nice nor as flowey as your version here. I can think of having some strong polycarbonate material in a 3D printer to create a mail like this to make a bulletproof armor of some kind in the future. But who knows what the potential of 3D printing can bring. Anyway, still one of my all time favorite inventions on the internet, so keep up the good work!
You could ty and and make some special outside edge of piece that would make is to where you can attach real fabric to the non-flat side so it would be like a pixel poncho that is soft and warm
Really creative. Just a couple of questions. What was the smallest nozzle that you tried on the smaller versions? Did you try any flexible filament? Just curious.
The brilliance behind all these designs blows me away. Is he still pursuing this? Like still trying to make more better fabrics? His multi color ones are gorgeous too. He's totally so onto something great!
@@carlwheezerofsouls3273 I actually didn’t read any of the comments until after I posted this, I was thinking of deleting mine after seeing the other one but I decided to leave it because I didn’t think anyone would really see it
The one with the bowl was way more fabric-y than the triangular mesh
Mitchel Tran too week though
Ultramax 1197 that long?
@@ewanhope2265 I think they meant weak
@@ollie2111 r/wooosh
yeah that one's my fav
You could make blinds with it so when the sun comes up the light is diffused into the room in a grid-like pattern.
Oh yeaaaa
thats a cool idea
But what if you want to be dark? Like when ur watching a movie
Cool idea but that would defeat the purpose of blinds.
isn't that just a ...... curtain
Millennial grandmas are gonna be 3d printing quilts 50 years from now
Ikr. They would designt it online instead.
"I USED MAH PRUSA I 3 MARK 9!!!!!!!"
ftom
Hahahaha! They will be sitting in their motorized rocking-chairs and wear VR-goggles while they design christmas-sweaters for their grandchildren in AutoCAD - using motion-sense gloves xD
@Aaron Sanders Old people today still use old stuff like books instead of iPads and cash instead of credit cards. So in the future I assume VR Goggles/iPads and 3D printers will be the "new old" book and stiching needles, and credit cards will be the "new old" payment method instead of paying with bioauthentication/DNA or something...
(Unless our generation is more accepting towards evolving technology than todays elders. Which we probably are, so you might have a point afterall!)
You could make a good curtain with this if you want soft light to wake you up in the morning, floor mat if its strong enough, table cloth(if you spill, the holes drain the water), and multiple architectural structures. Its unique properties could make a cloth chair one day
The tablecloth is meant to catch liquids so it doesn’t actually hit the table underneath it
The curtain idea is interesting, when you stretch it it has a lot of holes for light to come thru, when collapsed , by strings or something, it would be solid, no light thru.
Victor Rossi like a solid curtain piece on both edges and when you draw the blinds shut it pull both sides up and at the top a solid bar that pulls one edge towards the other along the top hat would collapse it so it’s tight together. Then maybe use like undeerhangs for each piece so they actually cover small gaps between
You could do the floor mat but you need some type of Carbon Fiber filament
@@connorferraro6683 I have not seen *deliberately* 3D-printed brushes yet. I wonder how feasible it is to print fleece.
"Unique bowl" accidentally creates a steamer basket out of plastic
Yeah , but if you use it , the dumplings will gain some chemicals from the plastic which from that bowl will be made off . ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@@laurentykalashnikov1745 yum!
Strain your noodles with it
If you can find a heat resistant plastic it would be pretty good
@@suphorg8597 if the plastic was heat resistant how would you 3-d print with it
When you’re at a friends house and they don’t give you a blanket
Commander Tard wow
10 hours for a blanket
Salty Bread my kind of pettiness
I laughed way to hard at that bro 😂😂😂
Yup
I feel like you could use the one as a strainer instead of a bowl.
Or a net
It’s pretty fragile though. A lot of water pressure could break it.
Yeah! I was thinking that too!
You probably could but only if it was cold items. Unless you like cancer!
@@SylasTheGreat Not all plastics are toxic.
Considering the way light passes through it, I think it would make for some really awesome curtains!
That's a lot of stitching, but it would be sooo cool I might commit :P
This did remind me of architecture using louvres. The last material as a window shade could be compressed from the sides to shut out more light. Also reminded me of Torggler doors.
Ooooo!
lol i literally commented nearly the same thing, i was thinking blinds though. they remind me of something from india but not sure what
Curtains were the first thing I thought of too. They could really be cool. A belt and a hat might be cool too but the curtains would definitely work!
Real life fabric with the same number of polys as video game fabric.
You can wear it as a ps1 character with a cybertruck
Toaster having a bath lol
retread01 lmao
It's evolving just backwards
If you re-visit this kind of thought, I suggest you look into Chain Mail, Ring Mail, and Scale Mail. Those were essentially the first real forms of metal cloth (In that it is a flexible sheet that can be 'stitched' together to form pieces like clothing and bags). And understanding the rudimentary differences in form and qualities between an Oriental 4-in-1 weave or a European 4-in-1 or European 6-in-1 could give you a pretty firm grasp on how to try to push yourself further into making different or newer forms to play with. Actually, your Triangular patterns there kind of remind me of an Oriental 3-in-1 design. Where each triangle is connected to 3 others by a linkage.
I also want to say that as a Maille weaver, it made be cringe just a little bit when I saw your squared off joins and rings. learning how to do the same thing with toroid shapes would make it feel smoother on the skin in any direction that it would rub over, on either side. Also, your scales: typically, in traditional scale mail, you might find it interesting that each scale has its connection hole in the very top, and is connected from there to each of its four neighbors by a link between them. That way, as the finished piece lies flat, the linkages are hidden by the layer above.
If you would like, I can point you in the direction of some Chain mailling resources that are fairly simple to delve into and understand, so you can dissect the forms of various weaves, and further understand the sizing of the rings (Both in inner diameter and thickness) affect the flexibility, durability, and such of the piece.
Wat.
old man describing beavis and butthead to the police: "....ah think they were oriental"
Awesome man ...........try using translucent material will look awesome I think
Atharva Pande yassss
Julia Horowitz are those not the same thing?
no translucent it allows only part of the light through (so it blurs anything far away behind it) transparent you can just see through like glass
protopasta "stardust" glitter flake htplac or use some fil oyu wanna use up, and hit it with chrome effect spray.
datstuff It's really hard to get 3D printed parts to come out actually transparent, though. Even with transparent filament, the layers and lines in which the material is deposited introduce lots of tiny gaps within the print, and the plastic-to-air transitions there create refractive interfaces. The upshot is that for anything other than "vase mode" single layer thick prints, you basically can't get transparent objects with FDM printing.
Grandma now: knits you a sweater
Grandma in the future: 3D prints you a sweater
Stolen, pathetic
Grandma then: makes you the sweater
Completely stolen
There is no originality here
@@adammilan6434almost everything is stolen in youtube
@@sociallyunactive Yep people would rather get credit for someone else's idea than to come up with it themselves, im the opposite.. its satisfying to come up with something
A 3d neck tie would be a nice addition to my closet.
most ties are 3d
Nerd
69
@@therealme9397 419
Don't forget the 4d ones, they might be ultra rare, but they do exist
If this was the 70's, you'd be making a fortune making screen doors.
But then I wouldn't have a 3D printer :P
@@make.anything then just print one with your 3d printer
The bowl with the 3D printed cloth I think it’s perfect for a sieve for sifting some rocks.
Only problem is that anything smaller than a pebble (so stuff like gold) would just fall through the holes
@@jamesmd9925 that is what a sieve is, yes
@@jamesmd9925 Yeah but it would be perfect for looking for cool rocks
I liked your 'final' design. I can't wait to see what it evolves into.
YES! finally a fabric i can print and use to wipe my tears away when my other prints fail!
actually it is plastic so it isn't absorbent
sorry for bursting your bubble.
If the fabric doesn’t fail...
N BR ABS is hygroscopic like nylon. High surface area prints like these would probably absorb a noticeable amount of water. A tumble dryer would shake out some of it quite easily, the internal water vapour will take some time to dry out and probably will need a vacuum to completely dry out.
The way the triangular one was able to hold a shape might make it a perfect material for large-scale camouflage.
also tents
Yeah
As an art teacher at the local school I think especially that self-standing fabric is interesting for teaching lighting and shadows and three dimensional drawing!
As an art student if my teacher brings this out for drawingI think my brain would break
This is great
And your name is DRY
How bout a Hammock? Not durable enough? Won't hold the weight? Still it'd be cool!
I need a 3d printed hammock!
Hammock for a geko.
a doll?
You guys are thinking a bit too small. I think a medium sized snake
What about an adult bearded dragon?
Dude... You can LITERALLY have an art gallery and make 💰 the last one standing on it's own. "Plastic blanket" with natural window sunlight casting cool shadows? Hell yeah
Poetry In Death but he can’t clam it since a lot of people already make 3D printed cloth before him
And I don’t think it’s gona be in a art gallery...
@@premiumboi473 I mean, that's kinda like saying people can't sell landscapes or portraits because other people have done it before them, just because other people have done artwork In a similar format doesnt mean people can't bring new ideas to the table and make a profit. If it's his own designs for the fabric there shouldn't be any issues.
@@rowbee3826 he didn't invent it though, so he can't trademark it. Also it's very likely someone already has, or there's no point as the demand doesn't match the product(not enough people want this or even care about it)
@@shadelightss never said anything about trademarking, the og comment says he should display it in an art gallery, you dont need a trademark to do that. If hes doing it his own way and not copying other designs/versions it falls under fair use
@@shadelightss I mean, he did invent this specific 3d printed cloth
I personally liked the one the 'bowl' thing was made of... What if you'd mix using this technique and flexible material, then just remove all sharp edges, so ist more like interlocking rings instead of rectangles. Sounds like this could possibly make it a much softer fabric... Anyway very interesting and nice attempts...
tobsam that was my favorite too
Be great to print in a clear material to use with light sources.
Awesome idea! This should be made into a video 😁
This has some amazing cosplay potential!
Yeah! :D
wow simply amazing, i love the rigid circle with "flowy" middle, it can really demonstrate to people the extend of different things a 3D printer can do, keep being awesome!
Derek Boudreau I have the strong temptation to throw it I'm curious as to how it would fly would it fly like a frisbee how would the floppy centre interact with the air how would the ear go through the holes I really want to see this now
Love that material you made the bowl with.
Yeah, that one's my favorite.
It’s a neat instrument too! Almost a tambourine, but really different sounding.
Phil Nolan I agree it is the best one
Phil Nolan i wanna know what its called and i wanna buy one
It’s literally a dim sum container
10:48 that could be used to make self standing structures, like for tents and stuff
"Oh, I just Broke my pants"
At least you could 3d print an easy patch
broke?
@@baggybants 3d printed pants.
You can break normal pants tho-
@@spencerwwu normal pants rip
my favorite one was the bowl one without the strong border
Me when I'm a grandma making plastic quilts for my grandchildren.
Dude, this is SO COOL.
+Punished Props thanks! Maybe you can work some printed chainmail into your costumes 🤔
Punished pros you're so as some I hope you like my comment
Sorry I ment to say props😊
Punished Props i
3D printed phone
I still like the bowl fabric the most tho...
me too
Same
Same
This is legit the very first video that actually made me want a 3D printer.
Absolutely *_stellar_* job on the triangle fabric! I may or may not try to use that concept somehow.
Something about that shiny white hexy material just *screams* Sci-fi!
Perhaps these "fabrics" could be used in a Hollywood movie for a future society where they make them and wear them. In other words, you can get a contract making props for a movie.
@@peterlindner3283 Sounds about right: Costumes that look awesome on camera, but are awkward to wear. And they would probably have to dub the dialogue, because the loud rustling noises will not fit with the sound design.
Imagine the triangle design, just metal, and on super cool looking armour.
This my wise space chowder, is what the future will be like.
Space Chowder space chain mail... I wonder about the durability of such a design? The individual plates would have to be pretty thick to provide any significant protection. Although, that being said, since that could be produced via an SLS process, it might be easier to make more complex shapes, due to the absence of support concerns with SLS
horizon zero dawn
Deus Ex
Metal plates don't need to be to thick unless you're going up against bullets. In which case you should just use kevlar
Just got my first printer, wanted you to know that even 3 yrs later this video is still providing inspiration for projects. Very cool prints man!
I think you need to make yourself a Christmas sweater
Erin Rhonemus
OMG! Yes! That's an awesome idea.
YES!
absolutely!!
It would certainly keep you cool if you didn't want to get warm.
Erin Rhonemus I would wear that
Make a window shade that can make light go trough less and more by contracting the thing like when you play with it by putting it between two transparent glass/plastic and have something to push it from the bottom to make less light go through
Like blinds?
Yesss
Imagine if you had a printer with a build size of 10 feet. You could stretch them out as far as they go, glue fabric over the tops of the triangles, and you literally have a self-standing tent
Loving the projects so far. You’re very creative. Much support!!!!
MrCheeseMan4411 I will support him too
whoooooa 3d quilting
Ada Emerson more like 3d quitting...
The Grandmas of the Future
Carl Sahagun XD
"This triangle dancing around my room"
My mind: pumped up kicks yellow triangle.
I though it was just me 😂😂
It’s green
Hey Devin, this is absolutely brilliant. Keep up the good work. Cheers, JAYTEE
This is actually really interesting! It reminds me of a purse I used to have with a metal "fabric" made from hexagons.
imagine having a jacket made out of this stuff! That'd look hella cyperpunk
Cons of 3D printed fabric
cannot absorb water for example like wiping your face
Jaimme Pineda you’d have to find a way to increase the porosity but I could be done
fabric already exists, hes looking for new uses that the new material could work well for
One con, otherwise they're awesome
Pros. Cannot absorb water. For example. When you want to stay dry
I could see this being useful for military purposes, maybe printing items that are made with a Kevlar kind of material for wearable or vehicular applications.
Here's an idea off the top of my head! Would it be possible to print your quilting tiles in varying tones of the same color? I think having a "quilt" with a soft color transition waving across it would be pretty! Also I wonder if a thermally insulated blanket could be made! And I'll bet you could make some cool hats with this stuff! This is awesome! ~Arctic
I do have a lot of shades of blue... :)
Perfect! I'd envisioned a large blue "blanket" with either geometric designs of a slightly different shade or with gradual color transition throughout, like going from dark to light blue and then back across the surface. This is cool!
3:29 who else recognized that as an inside reverse fold from origami?
I think thats a cone
Same, but not quite, close though
Me
Pac-Man
Sorry, I slept it! Uploading the files now :P
Make Anything // 3D Printing Channel why don’t you make curtains out of it???
I was thinking that too
do a shirt with it!
Make Anything // 3D Printing Channel you should make a hobermans sphere. It will be challenging but so worth it.
*Batman voice* "Does it come in black?"
These could be very very effective strainers xD
4:35 I love the way that looks, I'm really impressed! I could totally see printing that and connecting all the pieces together to make a big quilt, adding a soft plush quilt fabric beneath. Very, very interesting
My cr-10 is printing the triangle mesh right now!!
+Brick Thunder nice!
stop bragging
Well is it done?
This was a joke but lol
What can you do with a triangle mesh?
How much do you pay for the simple plastic lmao
I think you forgot about Vase Exploration.
Each day we get more and more close to get the clothes from the Androids in Detroit: Become Human.
I love it
I would so love to experiment making wearable things with your fabrics
you are fantastic. I love this so much
I am always looking for new fabrics
I think that what you are doing here is so awesome
I wonder if you can put actual fabric on the tray at the edge of the samples you print and print on to the fabric as an edge so that then I could actually seW it on a sewing machine? so you could make the printed part attach to the fabric?
I would love to discuss more ideas with you
...
...?
You should sell these as luxury fidget toys
Hayley Sommers I'd buy one for sure!
would get mad cash for doing that tbh
This is awesome. I think one area where these types of 3D-printed fabrics could really shine is in bags and backpacks. They don't sit against your body so they don't have to be comfortable, and they don't have to be incredibly flexible.
Isn’t this how graphics rendering of surfaces works. Many Triangles and quads ..
More or less, yea!
Make Anything *DORITO CLOTH*
or Pentagon's and hexagons
Can you make that fabric, fold/make it in to a sphere and make like a globe, earth.
Stoffer108 Earth is flat though...
MysticOceanDollies someone is new on youtube
Whether he was joking or not, I took it as a joke, and it was kinda funny.
I could see this being used as like heavy tarps or you put on top of a tarp or a topper to a fabric top vehicle to give it a little bit of protection from above
wow, this is very interesting to cosplay!! you can make chainmails and more
5:27 it could be a strainer
A few of these i see a few ideas but i think you should try the flexible filament they have nowadays
I myself am looking to try this since i recently purchased a 3d printer.
You could probably use the last big one as a bath mat or put it over a bath mat for a cool texture
One use, is to print flexible solar panels
ThatBoi M00se lol, no. Solar panels are a joke and have no practical use beyond space travel
Tim Valstad they are clean energy, healthy for the environment.
Nanno MC I hope you're joking.
The amount of energy you waste constructing and assembling solar panels is pointless when you can generate far more power through nuclear. If you want clean, you can't beat nuclear.
Nuclear is dangerous... But it's more powerful. I still think solar panels are the best choice
You were all like interesting light and I was all like "it looks like a fishing net..."
Hmm... 3d printed blankets...
Calvin K that would be so uncomfortable,
It has plastic spike under it
Spikes*
I want one, ps you could just use the smoother side
Calvin K thats what i was thinking😂😂
the way the triangle one scatters light they could make cool curtains
can u make it 2 layers ? so both sides are smooth
i was looking for something like this for the under suit in some futuristic armor i was going to print some day.
9:50 "We will Rock you." "We will rock you."
Make window shades out of them.
Maybe but you'd have to try to find a material that doesn't fade in the sun and take heat. Those materials are way more expensive. Look at how curtains made from fabric will fade.
Back in my junior year of college, I took a 3D print shop class. It was really one of my favorite classes ever! For my final project, I was heavily inspired by this video to try and recreate your fabric in Rhino 3D and print it on a flashforge. It took me almost 5 tries and two weeks of tinkering, but I managed to get my own 3D fabric for my final. However, it's still not as nice nor as flowey as your version here. I can think of having some strong polycarbonate material in a 3D printer to create a mail like this to make a bulletproof armor of some kind in the future. But who knows what the potential of 3D printing can bring. Anyway, still one of my all time favorite inventions on the internet, so keep up the good work!
When you go to the configurarions and lower the graphics to the minimum soo life runs faster
You could ty and and make some special outside edge of piece that would make is to where you can attach real fabric to the non-flat side so it would be like a pixel poncho that is soft and warm
NOVA CLONE you could try attaching it to fabric with something like fabric glue (acetone based)
3D printer: *exists to make plastic*
guy: *makes cloth*
creator: “hol’ up” *fallout man meme*
Could this be done with something similar to Ninjaflex filament, IE. a flexible filament to make it even more Fabric like?
9:10 autumn theme? Let me introduce you to Iron Man.
**Gryffindor**
There's so much potential for this in fashion....you've inspired me
Next time on: MSSOC (Military Super Soldiers on Crack) ...
3D printed Kevlar armor in triangle shapes!
UA-cam had unsubscribed me from your channel again... Thankfully i realized i had't seen your videos for a while in my feed
Mari no it didnt.
Green Ranger It likely did, it's def not fixed yet. It's not like they're saying something extremely outlandish.
great to see videos like this to show you how creative you can be with a 3d printer can't wait to get mine!
HECK YOUR VIDEOS ARE SO COOL- YOU'RE DOING GREAT! KEEP IT UP! I BINGE YOUR VIDEOS WHEN IM BORED
mia perso Sir this is a Christian server, no swearing.
mia perso SOOOOOOOO TRUUUUUUUUUUUE😄😄😄😄😄😄😄😄😄
Mintlucky he didn't he said heck
FR!CK
uh she but thanks uvu
Really creative. Just a couple of questions.
What was the smallest nozzle that you tried on the smaller versions?
Did you try any flexible filament?
Just curious.
Yeah I was wondering if it would work better at smaller sizes with a smaller nozzle.
I think you could very easily make a butterfly catcher of some kind with this or some kind of fishing net if you scaled up the gaps
I think you could make some really cool jewellery, if you could get it small enough and have little triangles of the fabric would look super cool.
Lauren Ashwell it wouldve been a waste cause 3d printed jewelry is already a thing
Where are the files??? They're not on mmf. Maybe upload there before posting the video??
Yeah, I was pretty excited to try designing something around these, too :c
The brilliance behind all these designs blows me away. Is he still pursuing this? Like still trying to make more better fabrics? His multi color ones are gorgeous too. He's totally so onto something great!
Love this, can't wait to print some of these. Are you going to expand on this further...maybe with nylon so you can dye it?
If only I had nylon dry enough to print that successfully :P
That's definitely the caveat with nylon
The rigid/solid combo that you made could have application as a specially made filter of sorts
does it float? could be cool way to add solar in remote areas and maybe pools when not in use?
Make some curtains! :)
Adidas has some bags made of some sort of printed fabric
its a collaboration with issey miyake, issey miyake's signature is those triangles, but those are attached to a mesh if im not mistaken
The idea of a futuristic full length trench-coat made of this material in a dark grey or black makes me drool.
Now I wanna 3D print a watch strap but with smoother surfaces. Any ideas on how to do this ?
Yo the green fabric with solid border gives me an idea to make a like a hammock of bed for small pets like lizards and stuff maybe? 🧐
When your friend doesn’t give you a blanket:
You: *3D prints blanket*
good for you, you saw the comment with 5k likes and thought “well if i write the same thing, ill get just as many!”
@@carlwheezerofsouls3273 I actually didn’t read any of the comments until after I posted this, I was thinking of deleting mine after seeing the other one but I decided to leave it because I didn’t think anyone would really see it
I'm in the same boat. Just watched the video with my daughter. She's super excited to try the files, but we can't find them.
Sorry, they're up now!
Thank you. Downloaded and printing now.
Have you ever printed a jacket or something using this method?
This is a really cool experiment and I really enjoyed watching it.
Could you just make me an outfit real quick