The Age of 3D Printable Footwear Is Here, and It's Open-Source - Yanko Design
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The Age of 3D Printable Footwear Is Here, and It's Open-Source - Yanko Design
"The Fig.(0) is a slip-on clog with a perforated upper, designed for comfort and breathability, but the real story isn't the aesthetics. It's the fact that Bambu Lab, a company known for pushing desktop 3D printing speeds to absurd limits, and Presq, a design studio with a knack for blending tech and culture, decided to drop this as a free, remixable project. They're not selling shoes. They're selling the idea that shoes don't have to come from a factory halfway across the world."
"The files are hosted on MakerWorld, Bambu's platform for 3D print assets, and they include everything you'd need to start printing your own pair: a pre-sliced .3mf file optimized for their H2D printers, a scaling coefficient table for resizing, and even a full CAD file for deep customization. The materials? Matte TPE 85A for the flexible parts, PLA for supports. The printer settings? Dialed in for Bambu's machines, but adaptable if you're willing to tweak."
Bambu Lab and Presq released Fig.(0), an open-source, 3D-printable slip-on clog with a perforated upper designed for comfort and breathability. The project supplies CAD files, a pre-sliced .3mf optimized for H2D printers, a scaling coefficient table for resizing, and print profiles hosted on MakerWorld. The recommended materials include matte TPE 85A for flexible parts and PLA for supports. Printer settings are calibrated for Bambu machines but can be adapted for other equipment. The initiative reframes footwear production by enabling maker-community customization, local fabrication, and remixable design rather than factory-made, branded exclusivity.
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