Book Image

Blender 3D Printing by Example

By : Vicky Somma
5 (1)
Book Image

Blender 3D Printing by Example

5 (1)
By: Vicky Somma

Overview of this book

Blender is an open-source modeling and animation program popular in the 3D printing community. 3D printing brings along different considerations than animation and virtual reality. This book walks you through four projects to learn using Blender for 3D Printing, giving you information that you need to know to create high-quality 3D printed objects. The book starts with two jewelry projects-- a pendant of a silhouette and a bracelet with custom text. We then explore architectural modeling as you learn to makes a figurine from photos of a home. The final project, a human hand, illustrates how Blender can be used for organic models and how colors can be added to the design. You will learn modeling for 3D printing with the help of these projects. Whether you plan to print at-home or use a service bureau, you’ll start by understanding design requirements. The book begins with simple projects to get you started with 3D modeling basics and the tools available in Blender. As the book progresses, you’ll get exposed to more robust mesh modeling techniques, modifiers, and Blender shortcuts. By the time you reach your final project, you’ll be ready for organic modeling and learning how to add colors. In the final section, you’ll learn how to check for and correct common modeling issues to ensure the 3D printer can make your idea a reality!
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Repairing models with 3D Builder

There are a number of services available to help repair your models. Autodesk NetFabb and MakePrintable are two examples. However, if you are already using Windows 10, you need look no further than your own workstation. Microsoft's 3D Builder application is installed by default and will make repairs to models.

Not only will 3D Builder take care of issues such as duplicate vertices, bad face normals, and non-manifold edges, but it will also get rid of unnecessary internal geometry. In Chapter 4, Flattening a Torus and Boolean Union, we saw how overlapping separate objects (without doing a Boolean Modifier) would cause confusing internal geometry. 3D Builder will recognize and correct that issue as well.

To use 3D Builder in Windows 10, the steps are:

  1. In Blender, go to File | Export | Stl (.stl) to save your model as an STL file. Don't...