Latest Articles

How-To & Projects

When you start designing for 3D printing in Fusion 360 (now Autodesk Fusion), you can model shapes easily enough, but tight holes and ill-fitting lids tend to stop you in your tracks. As someone who regularly designs small enclosures and brackets, I can say that early prototypes really drive home how much FDM tolerance planning matters.

How-To & Projects

Tinkercad is a free, browser-based 3D modeling tool from Autodesk that pairs remarkably well with making your very first 3D print. This guide walks you through creating an Autodesk account, starting a new design, prioritizing core operations, and exporting STL files, all in an order designed to minimize confusion.

How-To & Projects

There are tons of free 3D model sites out there, but surprisingly few are actually practical for 3D printing. This guide narrows it down to 8 sites, comparing them for beginners looking for printable files and anyone who wants to find useful models efficiently.

Setup & Settings

STL is the go-to format for 3D printing, but it only stores surface geometry. It works great for single-color prints, yet it cannot carry color, material, unit, or editable CAD data by default.

How-To & Projects

Trying to 3D print your first figure but unsure whether to go with FDM or resin printing? As a general rule, resin printing has the edge for small-scale figures where facial details and hair strands matter, while FDM works well for larger or chibi-style prints you want to produce without fuss.

How-To & Projects

If you want to 3D print a phone case, deciding upfront whether to use an existing model or design from scratch—and focusing on FDM/FFF printers—makes the whole process much clearer. This article covers material selection, print orientation, and dimensional tuning for first-timers and those ready to move from PLA prototyping to TPU production.

Choosing a Printer

A 3D scanner captures an object's surface geometry as a point cloud, then software handles alignment and hole-filling to produce usable 3D data. Structured light, laser, and ToF systems each have distinct strengths, so understanding the landscape upfront eliminates most of the confusion around picking the right unit.