Wow first time looking at FDM 3D printed clothes, I've had a 3D printer for a few years now and i never thought that this was possible, the clothes are not only functional but there are also beautiful!!! Of course there's a lot of work soldering the pieces together but still is al worthy specially for achieving personalized designs, and truly unique clothing!!! Amazing work!!!!
Holy shit, this is cool as hell. Sewing clothing is completely my shit, and I've been interested in 3d printing for forever. I didn't know you could combine the two!
Wow. Getting a solid range. I really like the way the jacket sits. It’s like the material is faux leather. I’ve played with the infill method in the past but think I’ll need to give it another go. 👍
Imagine if the materials to make 3D printed clothes were biodegradable. People could sustainably have disposable clothes everyday. For people who really love to change up their style they could just print new clothes everyday
You can print the black shapes in-between the white pieces without removing them off the printbed. This saves the hassle with the 3d pen and aligning them. Just make sure you don't re-home the printer in between, or you will lose alignment unless you have a really well tuned printer.
OHH interesting!! Would it just be a matter of adjusting the "Z hop"?? I honestly thought that the thickness of the white pieces wouldn't make that possible. Thanks for the suggestion!!
@@SewPrinted if you print a single layer you the existing pieces shouldn't matter. If you want multiple layers you'd probably have to switch filament after each layer, which might be more of a hassle than your current process. I don't know about cura, but you can fool PrusaSlicer into thinking that you have a multi-printhead or multi-material machine, while actually doing all the color swapping manually.
This is honestly amazing ! Love the nerdy details and the way you exploit your printer and include the 3D pen is so impressive. You deserve way more subs and attention.
Really cool stuff! A quick thought on the approach for houndstooth - if you align the black and white parts in your slicer you can print the black on top of the white, reducing the need for seams/3D pen work. You’ll just need to make sure the printer doesn’t cool down between prints and use Z-hop to ensure the nozzle doesn’t drag over & damage the printed layers on rapid moves.
You could probably print both colors for the hounds tooth at the same time by doing Z hopping with a filament switch. something I learned from Devin on Make Anything which he used for phone cases. I used this technique to make some phone cases for the family with rubber filament and they worked great.
This is a whole world of 3d printing i never knew existed wow, but guess I've always worked in the engineering side of things. Plus also you have some serious talent just printing and putting these clothes together! Well Done :)
You are an inspiration! Great work, and lot's of unique techniques too! In case you aren't familiar, there is a technique you could use if you do something like the hounds tooth again that could save you some time. It involves printing the first color, then without taking it off the bed, print the second color but use zhop settings so that anywhere the second print goes over the first print, the nozzle will be raised and it won't hit it. You could even have a third model set to print starting at the final Hight of the others that could be designed to just print over the edges where you want to 2 colors to be connected. Anyway, glad I found this video. I'm going to go watch some more of yours. It's making me want to print new ideas. Thank you!
Thank you so much! Just took a screenshot of your comment since I'm working on another dual-color project. I appreciate the suggestion and the support!!!
I absolutely love this! A dual extruder printer would help with the time of the overall dress but your ingenuity and improvisation while working on it it really amazing. I feel like working on 3d printed fabric is one of the best uses for the 3d pen that I’ve seen. Great work!
Question... or, a thought on the hounds tooth dress. I wonder if you could print the 2nd color by a) keeping the bed at temperature after the first color finishes, and b) immediately changing filament colors and printing the 2nd color. The trick (I think?) would be to ensure Z-hop is set to prevent dragging the nozzle over the existing 1st color. Just a thought.
That jacket is amazing! Reminds me of a design some nike shoes have e.g. Nike React Element 87. Have you thought about incorperating more stitching to maybe make them 90% 3d printed then add details and seams with stitching? Also another idea related to shoes would be to have pockets in certain areas where you could embed padding or foam. I've got so many ideas ^_^
I didn't know you could 3d print clothes until I came across your channel! I'm definitely gonna try it out myself..Also I love how excited/creative you are in these videos!! :D
Just found your channel. Fantastic use of 3D printing! I've been seeing more DIYers and even companies exploring the possibility of using 3D printing to produce clothing. I think for the hound's tooth pattern overalls dress would greatly benefit from the Prusa's Multi Material Unit add-on or the Palette module from Mosaic Manufacturing.
Thank you so much!! I haven't looked into the Prusa Multi-Material Unit, but will now. I've seen some of these palettes and they look awesome but they don't work with flexible filament because of the way they push filament :/ I use flexible filament and a direct drive extruder is essential. Anyways, I'll probably look into it again sometime. Thanks again for the suggestion :)
Woah this is so cool! Your designs and clothes are beautiful I’m mesmerized by the way you put everything together. You’re seriously talented! I subscribed and I really look forward to any future projects u may have
Your 'Infill' Method for making 3D printed fabric looks great! The jacket really turned out...(?) perfect - I don't think I've ever really seen a 3D printed garment that refined & produced by one individual before.....& thats not a joke either; I just spent ~30m searching Images on the web & reading through a ~dozen fashion articles or so to check & see if saying "I don't think I've ever seen anything like that..." would make me sound like some patronizing clown. I didn't find anything...(?) So, very nicely done, indeed! ...Anyhow, it was cool to see a soldering iron used to connect the jacket all together, & the 3D pen for troubleshooting on the fly too. Definitely some good stuff!
Oh wow!! Thank you so much. I really appreciate your kind words. Although they work with really high fashion garments that are not the most practical for everyday wear, there are other designers that have amazing 3D printed wearables. Some of my favorites: Iris Van Herpen, Danit Peleg, and Julia Koerner (she did some pieces for Marvel’s Black Panther movie and they were AMAZING). Again, thank you so much for your continued support. Feel free to let me know what things you’d like to see in future videos 👍🏼✨
Such a nice work! I appreciate your putting together skills with the 3D pen. I suggest this took a lot of time. If you have the chance to upgrade or change your Printer: a dual extrusion printer would be the best for you. Having two seperate hotends skips most of parts with the 3D pen.
You're right. It took waaaaay too long. I was actually looking into a printer like this but it was over my budget. Maybe in the future I could get one like this. Thank you for the support.
Wow this video has ONLY 5k views… this is the future. The first piece is beautifully constructed love the flow and silk/light like motion the jacket gave.
i dont know if anyone has thought of/tried this, but i feel like fabric on solid pieces such as the overall dress could be joined with a clothes iron and wax paper, just like those iron-together plastic bead things, and be a whole lot faster
It's funny that I was discussing the possibilities of 3D printing with my mother and was just talking about one of your experiments. And it was at that moment that a message popped up about the release of your new video. Great project, by the way.
you are awesome girl! such a cool idea and good execution, you have really put a lot of effort and many hours into this project and video. thanks for sharing with us and keep them videos coming ! wish you all the best
new subscriber here i am very impressed with your work keep making more things! thankyou for your technical commentary. i am new to 3d printing fabrics and i can see this technology disrupting fashion. you deserve way more subscribers.! cheers
Thank you so much for your kind words and good wishes!! I wish I was faster at editing these longer format videos. They’re the ones I enjoy making the most since you get to see everything that goes into the project and hopefully apply some aspects to your own creations. ✨
These look pretty neat. For the tessellated patterns, you might want to try a dual material extrusion system (some are as simple as a few printed parts and switches and a second extruder/motor on the same hot end) and overlapping the edges of the tiles in your slicer. That would eliminate the need for the pen and the sometimes-sharp blobs that result. The infill technique that you show off the results of here... Do you think that or similar could be somehow combined with one of the stringing or bridging techniques used for grass and hair to print pile fabrics? If you included a seam allowance on your pattern pieces that was left uncovered by pile, you might be able to make a very breathable faux fur coat, and thin enough strings could feel pretty close to real. Laundering would be an issue, but it already is with faux.
Thank you for your suggestions. Interesting thoughts!! I can definitely see how the overlap of edges may be beneficial and can help eliminate the steps that are more of a hazle (3d pen). I had a similar thought of making some more “vertical textures” that can resemble fur or animal textures (like snakeskin). Thanks again for the suggestions. I may look into it in the future and perhaps turn it into a short 👍🏼
@@SewPrinted I'd look forward to it! Also, since watching this, I saw a video on another channel with a different technique that might interest you. Instead of an infill pattern laid flat across the bed, they used a latticework model and spiraled it around itself to print a whole bolt. Seemed to offer the same physical properties except material temperature resistance, despite being done in PLA. Alternatively, if you wanted to go the bolt route and didn't mind the waste that involves due to having a filament recycler or something, you could probably try your infill technique on a conveyor belt printer like the CR-30 or the White Knight.
@@SewPrinted Does the infill technique still work at higher densities? You might be able to find a "weave tightness" that way that isn't so sheer but still remains breathable.
I love these concepts! This is an amazing use for 3D printing! 🤩 Regarding the houndstooth pattern print; the objects are flat enough that you probably could get away with printing one color and then the other without removing them from the bed until the entire swatch was done. It'd require a little manual gcode editing to skip auto bed leveling and stuff on the second print, but it'd stand to save a lot of labor, not having to manually join the two colors of each swatch. 👍 (Admittedly there's a few 'gotchas' you'd have to look out for, like making sure the travel between houndstooth elements is corner-to-corner of adjacent elements instead of moving across open spaces, and I don't know for sure how well the joints would hold up compared to the 3D-pen or soldering iron... But it's definitely something to experiment with!)
Thanks for the suggestion!! I definitely will experiment with the means cause the houndstooth took WAYYY too long. Also love the idea that I could use the tech to have less manual steps. Will give it a try and maybe create something plaid 🤔
@@SewPrinted Haha, plaid would be nuts! 😂 Oh, and doing a bit more thinking on the subject; if just printing the colors together doesn't bond them well enough, you could always have an additional print which specifically irons the seams! 👍
When you're "stitching" with the 3D pen it looks like you're using a pen that takes thicker sticks which I assume are PLA or maybe ABS - true? Have you tried using flexible filament in a pen that takes regular 1.75mm filament?
My 3D pen is almost 4 years old!!! :/ I definitely should get a new one, and I have been meaning to for a while. The pen is a 3Doodler that only "takes" its own filament sticks. You're right in that the sticks are a bit thicker. I stocked up early on with their "FLEXY" sticks which are TPU... now I kind of wish I hadn't but I've been trying to use them up whenever I can. Will be getting a new pen soon. Thank you!!
Hi Krizia , amazing video !! really like what you are using with just a 3d printer.I am curious about the quality of the jacket.Can you please compare its texture with any existing fabric ?!
Great question. I would say it has a similar texture to a thick raincoat or like if you were to wear a faux leather jacket inside out. Not a ‘cozy’ jacket but certainly not unwearable. I usually pair it with a long sleeve shirt underneath and that helps a lot with comfort and welp.. just keeping me warm in general since its a pretty open mesh 😉👍🏼
Like the dress. But, hw did u model it on a cad software? Hw did u decide on the dimensions of the design? Where can i get this kind of technical information about designing a 3d printed dress?
What a fascinating young lady! I loved the video and, once my 3D printer arrives next month, I’ll be sure to try printing materials for clothing. I haven’t checked your previous videos yet (doing that next) but I was wondering if you have tried printing directly upon cotton cloth? Anyway, great video and I am now a subscribed member of your channel.
Thank you so much!! Appreciate your kind words. I have tried printing on tulle and other fabrics (I have these experiments up on my Instagram and TikTok). These have only been experiments though, but I'll think I'll make a garment using this technique soon. Thanks for suggestion, and I would love to see what you create, feel free to send me a message on Instagram.
One detail I am askin myself, how do you feel wearing this fabric ? And another question How long did it cost you from designing to creating your jacket ? And great video . Thanks.
I'd be happy to!! I use a TPE called Fila Flex (linked in the description) by Recreus. In terms of creating the actual fabric I have a video on my channel" "5 Ways to 3D Print Fabric" and I'm using method #2 from that video. I'm planning to also make a step by step short video too in order to make it super clear. Thank you for the support.
In this video I used the Artillery Sidewinder and a Prusa MK3. There’s newer models in the market that might be better so I always encourage doing a bit of research tailored to the materials you’re thinking of printing with, budget, etc. I design the clothes using a 3d modeling software called Rhinoceros. In order to send the models to the printer you would need to use a slicing software.. not sure if those are available for phones, so a laptop may be necessary. Thanks for watching 💕
Wow first time looking at FDM 3D printed clothes, I've had a 3D printer for a few years now and i never thought that this was possible, the clothes are not only functional but there are also beautiful!!!
Of course there's a lot of work soldering the pieces together but still is al worthy specially for achieving personalized designs, and truly unique clothing!!!
Amazing work!!!!
Thank you for your kind words. I appreciate the support!!
Holy shit, this is cool as hell. Sewing clothing is completely my shit, and I've been interested in 3d printing for forever. I didn't know you could combine the two!
Wow. Getting a solid range. I really like the way the jacket sits. It’s like the material is faux leather. I’ve played with the infill method in the past but think I’ll need to give it another go. 👍
Yeah!!! I’d love to see what you make with it Brett!! ✨
Imagine if the materials to make 3D printed clothes were biodegradable. People could sustainably have disposable clothes everyday. For people who really love to change up their style they could just print new clothes everyday
Ikr, it's super cool but I personally can't get too excited about it unless there is a environmental friendly option
Most 3d printing filaments are thermoplastics and can be melted down and reused to make more 3d printing filament
Well plastic can always be melted down and create filament again and so you create another piece from a previous on
PLA is biodegradable ;)
There's a research on biodegradable plastic that gives good results. So maybe it's sooner that we think?😊
Girl, im literally screaming, that is crazy and you are amazing.
When you modeled the jacket I was totally blown away! It looks sooooo good.
I had no idea you could print anything like fabric. This is amazing and your items turned out so cute.
You can print the black shapes in-between the white pieces without removing them off the printbed. This saves the hassle with the 3d pen and aligning them. Just make sure you don't re-home the printer in between, or you will lose alignment unless you have a really well tuned printer.
OHH interesting!! Would it just be a matter of adjusting the "Z hop"?? I honestly thought that the thickness of the white pieces wouldn't make that possible. Thanks for the suggestion!!
@@SewPrinted if you print a single layer you the existing pieces shouldn't matter. If you want multiple layers you'd probably have to switch filament after each layer, which might be more of a hassle than your current process.
I don't know about cura, but you can fool PrusaSlicer into thinking that you have a multi-printhead or multi-material machine, while actually doing all the color swapping manually.
Amazing, can you tell me how the resistance with the washing machine is?
This is honestly amazing ! Love the nerdy details and the way you exploit your printer and include the 3D pen is so impressive. You deserve way more subs and attention.
Thank you so much! Means a lot :)
Really cool stuff! A quick thought on the approach for houndstooth - if you align the black and white parts in your slicer you can print the black on top of the white, reducing the need for seams/3D pen work. You’ll just need to make sure the printer doesn’t cool down between prints and use Z-hop to ensure the nozzle doesn’t drag over & damage the printed layers on rapid moves.
Was gonna suggest this myself!
These clothes look much better than I would expect from 3d printed clothes. Well done!
Thank you!! Means a lot.
The jacket would be so cute in a blue color so it mimics denim! Or white even (or blush pink 👀)
This is so inspiring! Thanks for sharing your project!
Thank you for watching. I appreciate the support :)
You could probably print both colors for the hounds tooth at the same time by doing Z hopping with a filament switch. something I learned from Devin on Make Anything which he used for phone cases. I used this technique to make some phone cases for the family with rubber filament and they worked great.
Thank you for the suggestion. I’ve got to try this since a couple of people have also brought it ip. Also a big fan of Devin’s channel :)
This is a whole world of 3d printing i never knew existed wow, but guess I've always worked in the engineering side of things. Plus also you have some serious talent just printing and putting these clothes together! Well Done :)
You are an inspiration! Great work, and lot's of unique techniques too! In case you aren't familiar, there is a technique you could use if you do something like the hounds tooth again that could save you some time. It involves printing the first color, then without taking it off the bed, print the second color but use zhop settings so that anywhere the second print goes over the first print, the nozzle will be raised and it won't hit it. You could even have a third model set to print starting at the final Hight of the others that could be designed to just print over the edges where you want to 2 colors to be connected.
Anyway, glad I found this video. I'm going to go watch some more of yours. It's making me want to print new ideas. Thank you!
Thank you so much! Just took a screenshot of your comment since I'm working on another dual-color project. I appreciate the suggestion and the support!!!
Amazingly creative.
I absolutely love this! A dual extruder printer would help with the time of the overall dress but your ingenuity and improvisation while working on it it really amazing. I feel like working on 3d printed fabric is one of the best uses for the 3d pen that I’ve seen. Great work!
Question... or, a thought on the hounds tooth dress. I wonder if you could print the 2nd color by a) keeping the bed at temperature after the first color finishes, and b) immediately changing filament colors and printing the 2nd color. The trick (I think?) would be to ensure Z-hop is set to prevent dragging the nozzle over the existing 1st color. Just a thought.
This is great!!! I've been getting into clothes sewing lately and I've had plans to combine that with 3D printing and this is a great inspiraiton!
Go for it! Would love to see what you create!!
Clever stuff, thanks, lots of inspiring ideas, tips and fixes I hadn't considered with 3D printing.
Thank you so much! I appreciate it✨🙏🏼
That jacket is amazing! Reminds me of a design some nike shoes have e.g. Nike React Element 87. Have you thought about incorperating more stitching to maybe make them 90% 3d printed then add details and seams with stitching? Also another idea related to shoes would be to have pockets in certain areas where you could embed padding or foam. I've got so many ideas ^_^
Oh wow! That's all spectacular! I really need to pick up some flexible filament to play with now
How does this not have more views?! This is brilliant! Great designs and ideas!
I didn't know you could 3d print clothes until I came across your channel! I'm definitely gonna try it out myself..Also I love how excited/creative you are in these videos!! :D
Wow im completely amazed! Cant wait for your channel to shoot off 😍
Thank you for your kind words Kelly!! New stuff already in the works :)
Hey i hope you haven't stopped making videos. I just found your channel and your content is so good!
Definitely haven't stopped. Thanks for the support!! Already working on the next one :)
Awesome work Krizia! You’re definitely going places 🤩✨
Thank you so much!! I appreciate your support.
My god, you blew my mind, love all your creations!! I´m going to try things like these
Please do! Would love to see what you make :)
Just found your channel. Fantastic use of 3D printing! I've been seeing more DIYers and even companies exploring the possibility of using 3D printing to produce clothing. I think for the hound's tooth pattern overalls dress would greatly benefit from the Prusa's Multi Material Unit add-on or the Palette module from Mosaic Manufacturing.
Thank you so much!! I haven't looked into the Prusa Multi-Material Unit, but will now. I've seen some of these palettes and they look awesome but they don't work with flexible filament because of the way they push filament :/ I use flexible filament and a direct drive extruder is essential. Anyways, I'll probably look into it again sometime. Thanks again for the suggestion :)
Woah this is so cool! Your designs and clothes are beautiful I’m mesmerized by the way you put everything together. You’re seriously talented! I subscribed and I really look forward to any future projects u may have
Your comment made my day!! 🫶 Thank you so much.
Your 'Infill' Method for making 3D printed fabric looks great! The jacket really turned out...(?) perfect - I don't think I've ever really seen a 3D printed garment that refined & produced by one individual before.....& thats not a joke either; I just spent ~30m searching Images on the web & reading through a ~dozen fashion articles or so to check & see if saying "I don't think I've ever seen anything like that..." would make me sound like some patronizing clown. I didn't find anything...(?) So, very nicely done, indeed!
...Anyhow, it was cool to see a soldering iron used to connect the jacket all together, & the 3D pen for troubleshooting on the fly too. Definitely some good stuff!
Oh wow!! Thank you so much. I really appreciate your kind words.
Although they work with really high fashion garments that are not the most practical for everyday wear, there are other designers that have amazing 3D printed wearables. Some of my favorites: Iris Van Herpen, Danit Peleg, and Julia Koerner (she did some pieces for Marvel’s Black Panther movie and they were AMAZING).
Again, thank you so much for your continued support. Feel free to let me know what things you’d like to see in future videos 👍🏼✨
Brilliant! Simply brilliant.
Thank you for your support ✨
WAAAAAA, AWESOMEE!! Print clothes are one of my weird dreams 🤩😍 very pleasant to see it works
Thank you!!! 🫶🏼 I’m working on some new projects that I will be sharing soon😉👍🏼
Krizia, you are smart and your ideas are amazing!
Thank you so much!! 🫶🏼
Such a nice work! I appreciate your putting together skills with the 3D pen. I suggest this took a lot of time. If you have the chance to upgrade or change your Printer: a dual extrusion printer would be the best for you. Having two seperate hotends skips most of parts with the 3D pen.
You're right. It took waaaaay too long. I was actually looking into a printer like this but it was over my budget. Maybe in the future I could get one like this. Thank you for the support.
Wow this video has ONLY 5k views… this is the future. The first piece is beautifully constructed love the flow and silk/light like motion the jacket gave.
Wow, thank you!
i dont know if anyone has thought of/tried this, but i feel like fabric on solid pieces such as the overall dress could be joined with a clothes iron and wax paper, just like those iron-together plastic bead things, and be a whole lot faster
I was thinking about using a clothes iron too. It would help smooth out rough seams too
It's funny that I was discussing the possibilities of 3D printing with my mother and was just talking about one of your experiments. And it was at that moment that a message popped up about the release of your new video. Great project, by the way.
Oh wow!! What a great coincidence. Thank you so much for your continued support. I truly appreciate it!!!
you are awesome girl! such a cool idea and good execution, you have really put a lot of effort and many hours into this project and video. thanks for sharing with us and keep them videos coming ! wish you all the best
Thank you so much for your kind works and support!! Means a lot :)
Please detail video on how to 3d print dress patterns
new subscriber here i am very impressed with your work keep making more things! thankyou for your technical commentary. i am new to 3d printing fabrics and i can see this technology disrupting fashion. you deserve way more subscribers.! cheers
Thank you so much for your kind words and good wishes!! I wish I was faster at editing these longer format videos. They’re the ones I enjoy making the most since you get to see everything that goes into the project and hopefully apply some aspects to your own creations. ✨
You are soooo bloody talented!!
Can't wait for the next project! You do such amazing job! Really inspiring😍
Thank you so much. I appreciate it :)
Very cool clothing! Thanks for sharing!
Thats genious! I never saw 3d printed clothing but you absolutely nailed it👍
Thanks, I appreciate it!!
WOW, you are so much talented!
Holy shit this is so cool! I never thought is using 3d printing like this
She’s so adorable
These look pretty neat. For the tessellated patterns, you might want to try a dual material extrusion system (some are as simple as a few printed parts and switches and a second extruder/motor on the same hot end) and overlapping the edges of the tiles in your slicer. That would eliminate the need for the pen and the sometimes-sharp blobs that result.
The infill technique that you show off the results of here... Do you think that or similar could be somehow combined with one of the stringing or bridging techniques used for grass and hair to print pile fabrics? If you included a seam allowance on your pattern pieces that was left uncovered by pile, you might be able to make a very breathable faux fur coat, and thin enough strings could feel pretty close to real. Laundering would be an issue, but it already is with faux.
Thank you for your suggestions. Interesting thoughts!! I can definitely see how the overlap of edges may be beneficial and can help eliminate the steps that are more of a hazle (3d pen).
I had a similar thought of making some more “vertical textures” that can resemble fur or animal textures (like snakeskin). Thanks again for the suggestions. I may look into it in the future and perhaps turn it into a short 👍🏼
@@SewPrinted I'd look forward to it! Also, since watching this, I saw a video on another channel with a different technique that might interest you. Instead of an infill pattern laid flat across the bed, they used a latticework model and spiraled it around itself to print a whole bolt. Seemed to offer the same physical properties except material temperature resistance, despite being done in PLA.
Alternatively, if you wanted to go the bolt route and didn't mind the waste that involves due to having a filament recycler or something, you could probably try your infill technique on a conveyor belt printer like the CR-30 or the White Knight.
@@SewPrinted Does the infill technique still work at higher densities? You might be able to find a "weave tightness" that way that isn't so sheer but still remains breathable.
Do you have the pattern for the fried egg purse? I think it's fabulous and I would be so ecstatic to make it!
The clothing looked great!!!!!
I love these concepts! This is an amazing use for 3D printing! 🤩 Regarding the houndstooth pattern print; the objects are flat enough that you probably could get away with printing one color and then the other without removing them from the bed until the entire swatch was done. It'd require a little manual gcode editing to skip auto bed leveling and stuff on the second print, but it'd stand to save a lot of labor, not having to manually join the two colors of each swatch. 👍 (Admittedly there's a few 'gotchas' you'd have to look out for, like making sure the travel between houndstooth elements is corner-to-corner of adjacent elements instead of moving across open spaces, and I don't know for sure how well the joints would hold up compared to the 3D-pen or soldering iron... But it's definitely something to experiment with!)
Thanks for the suggestion!! I definitely will experiment with the means cause the houndstooth took WAYYY too long. Also love the idea that I could use the tech to have less manual steps. Will give it a try and maybe create something plaid 🤔
@@SewPrinted Haha, plaid would be nuts! 😂 Oh, and doing a bit more thinking on the subject; if just printing the colors together doesn't bond them well enough, you could always have an additional print which specifically irons the seams! 👍
This is pretty cool. I wanna make a mask from 3D printing because then i can have more manufacturing design creativity
The jacket came out cold! 🥶
Definitely not for thermal comfort haha :)
Wow that’s amazing! Your work is incredible!
Oooh yours is my new favorite channel! ❤
Soldered fabric 🤯 I think I’ve seen everything in life
When you're "stitching" with the 3D pen it looks like you're using a pen that takes thicker sticks which I assume are PLA or maybe ABS - true? Have you tried using flexible filament in a pen that takes regular 1.75mm filament?
My 3D pen is almost 4 years old!!! :/ I definitely should get a new one, and I have been meaning to for a while. The pen is a 3Doodler that only "takes" its own filament sticks. You're right in that the sticks are a bit thicker. I stocked up early on with their "FLEXY" sticks which are TPU... now I kind of wish I hadn't but I've been trying to use them up whenever I can. Will be getting a new pen soon. Thank you!!
@@SewPrinted my pen is closer to 8 years old, cheap knockoff but it takes 1.75mm filament. I would think there's better stuff out now.
A word burning tool would probably work well for the soldering parts.
Awesome! Thanks for the suggestion.
That is very impressive 😯 have you thought about using the 3d printer to connect the edges of the fabrics?
Hi Krizia , amazing video !! really like what you are using with just a 3d printer.I am curious about the quality of the jacket.Can you please compare its texture with any existing fabric ?!
Great question. I would say it has a similar texture to a thick raincoat or like if you were to wear a faux leather jacket inside out. Not a ‘cozy’ jacket but certainly not unwearable. I usually pair it with a long sleeve shirt underneath and that helps a lot with comfort and welp.. just keeping me warm in general since its a pretty open mesh 😉👍🏼
Like the dress. But, hw did u model it on a cad software? Hw did u decide on the dimensions of the design? Where can i get this kind of technical information about designing a 3d printed dress?
Very nice! Just a question: How do you clean 3D printed fabric?
Great question. In the past I've used my washing machine, and even the dishwasher. Will post a video on this sometime.
girl this is amazing!!!
hey I just found your channel, just wanted to let you know I think its really cool and I want to see more!
MAKE MORE VIDEOS MORE MORE MORE FULFILL MY ENDLESS BINGE
haha that's the dream. Already editing the next one!! Thanks for the encouragement and support :)
Is it possible to use materials you would find standard clothes made from. Like is it possible to 3d print a hoodie that would last for years?
I have a skirt withe houndsooth pattern. Why we same?😮
Looks like something they'd wear in bladerunner!
Super cool the stuff you're making!
Thank you for the support ✨
Thanks for showing that this is possible
What a fascinating young lady! I loved the video and, once my 3D printer arrives next month, I’ll be sure to try printing materials for clothing. I haven’t checked your previous videos yet (doing that next) but I was wondering if you have tried printing directly upon cotton cloth? Anyway, great video and I am now a subscribed member of your channel.
Thank you so much!! Appreciate your kind words. I have tried printing on tulle and other fabrics (I have these experiments up on my Instagram and TikTok). These have only been experiments though, but I'll think I'll make a garment using this technique soon. Thanks for suggestion, and I would love to see what you create, feel free to send me a message on Instagram.
Only 3min into the video and this is so dope!!! Keep going, just subscribed!
Thank you so much for the support!! Truly appreciate it.
Looks sooooo good
Thank you so much 🫶
I wonder that 3d Printing clothes are Winter resistible? And which 3d Printer machine are good for making clothing?
If you don't mind, what kinds of filaments are you using for flexible fabric? Can I use regular PLA?
wow well done! didn't know it was possible
Uur awesome thanks.
Out standing work!! and also beautiful outfit.❤
Thank you so much 😀 I appreciate the support.
Genial! Había escuchado de la impresión 3D de tela, pero está está a otro nivel! Realmente impresionante
Muchas gracias por el apoyo!!
This is the content I like to see
What thickness do you design in your models (or how many layers are in the finished fabric)?
awesome! So inspiring!
One detail I am askin myself, how do you feel wearing this fabric ?
And another question
How long did it cost you from designing to creating your jacket ?
And great video . Thanks.
Which material and setting did you use in the cura can elaborate a little 😅rest video is totally awesome 💯💯💯
I'd be happy to!! I use a TPE called Fila Flex (linked in the description) by Recreus. In terms of creating the actual fabric I have a video on my channel" "5 Ways to 3D Print Fabric" and I'm using method #2 from that video. I'm planning to also make a step by step short video too in order to make it super clear. Thank you for the support.
@@SewPrinted Coool 💯now time to binge watch your content and learn something new from it 🙂🙂
so cool!
This is so clever! I love the jacket 🧥
Thank you!! I think that was my favorite piece too.
This is wild, nice job!
Found this channel from IG reel, this is so freaking cool!!
Welcome!! ✨ Thank you, I appreciate the support.
How much did the project cost you. In terms of the printer ? And then each clothing item ? Also whats the cost of material usually?
Hi I love this so much. I want to start experimenting on my own with printing fabrics. What type of 3d printer is best to use for fabrics?
Hi! Thank you. FDM 3d printers with a direct drive extruder work best if you’re interested in 3d printing with flexible filaments. 👍
Have you noticed the el in soldering? It's not supposed to be silent.
Which software do you use for fixing pattern and exactly cutting all the patches ?
This is amazing!
Wow. As someone not familiar with 3D printing, what would you say the overall cost of making this jacket was? An estimate is ok.
It's very cool!
This is so cool
Thanks I appreciate it ✨
This is so cool what printer is this and what do you design the clothes on ? Do I need a laptop ?
In this video I used the Artillery Sidewinder and a Prusa MK3. There’s newer models in the market that might be better so I always encourage doing a bit of research tailored to the materials you’re thinking of printing with, budget, etc. I design the clothes using a 3d modeling software called Rhinoceros. In order to send the models to the printer you would need to use a slicing software.. not sure if those are available for phones, so a laptop may be necessary. Thanks for watching 💕
Soooooo coooool Love it