This challenging print is a take on the classic pin screen toy.
Place an item below the pins and they'll move to mimic the contours of the object!
Test printing only a few pins at a time to make sure your they'll stick well to your print bed. If they do, slowly increase the quantity per print.
This project includes a 10 pin option that holds the thin end of each pin down to limit curling.
This was a lesson in getting around the limits of 3D printing! Printing tall and thin items (like a pin) vertically is normally torture on a printer.
This required a new pin design - one which could be printed sideways, and still have no overhangs. By placing the long neck of the pin on one side, and changing the head to a hexagon, each pin is now much easier to print!
Yes! This project was shared under the Creative Commons - Attribution license.
This license allows selling copies, but you must provide proper attribution, as detailed in the license itself.
Please note that any other projects linked here (remixes or related projects) may have a different license. Please respect those licenses.
The author remixed this model.