Just from my own perspective: you focussed on the diy design/making process in your videos, to me as a maker that is interesting. But like you said to sell a 100+ lamp, you need to focus on interior design. So maybe still highlighting the recycled materials but filming in higher end locations etc could reach a different audience.
Thank you, you're totally right. Marketing is 80% of the work but a part that I don't enjoy as much as creating unfortunately. Maybe I'll make another marketing push when I got the energy and then I'll film in higher end locations as you recommend.
@@frankadrianart You know, I believe a lot of creative people really don't like marketing... to the point they go to work in a offline shop that sells their goods offline, and actually like this experience more then posting anything to youtube or instagram:)
NO one... let me repeat. No one who wants to splash their dollar on designer style products - CARE what its made out off... NO one givesa damn about if its recyccle and only gave off 0.000000001 carbondioxide footprint etc. So focus on the design.
@@keithvlogs1 In fact, certain people might like it more if its dangerous and fucks up the environment since it's taking "value" away from other things. Humans are weird.
@@hydrocosmo if you really think rich people who uses their private jet to travel 50 miles care about the carbon footprint theyre saving from buying *recycled* lamp shade... you better slap your self so you can wake up to reality 🤣🤣
Hi Frank, I am a designer myself with SLA and FDM printers. I also have friends that sell custom stuff, and most on Etsy. I think that is the platform for these custom made items. You lamp price would be around 138 euro. That is very decent for a custom lamp. I really like your design. You also have to realise that making a good video or checking the stats of you video isn't a clear indication that the most viewed video is the best content you made. RUclips's algorithm is all over the place. I have reposted the same videos (shorts) and the algorithm sometimes pushed the video to 10k views, while other attempts resulted in 80 views, 200 views, of even 5 views. But keep making cool products and maybe open an Etsy store. That is your audience right there.
Hey, nice to hear! I've sold on Etsy as well in the past but I've felt the page has changed a lot in the recent years. I've seen lot of non hand made items being sold and to get any good exposure there you really need to pay for ads. My page works fine for selling and is much cheaper to maintain and list than etsy, (altough less organic traffic ofc). But I may give etsy another shot. Very good point on the youtube algorithm, views don't have to mean success! Thank you again for your comment and good luck with your designs too
5:42 Just to add a point, yes, your time is valuable based on your skills and for cases where you apply those skills. However, the assembly may not require the same set of skills And like we cannot have Steve Jobs be a street vendor and charge the same amount for the products saying his time is valuable - the value should be put in context. This is why outsourcing can be useful. Like the Unix philosophy do one thing and do one thing well, and optimize by maybe enlisting the help of someone interested and patient enough to do the things that you don't like The end consumer just looks at the overall value and not who did what. 😅 But good overall design BTW.
I love the lamp. Great design. The simplicity of it is ideal for a workspace or bedroom. That said, I would love to see the bottom done with recycled wood. I think adding wood to it would give it a more organic feel.
Hi Frank, I'm thinking about designing and selling items with my 3D printer. This video is very informative and such a real experience, thank you. BTW your lamp looks amazing!
3:51 bro i have exact same dimmer and its not flickering at all, it depend on your bulb or led light. Some of them support dimming and some of them not and that cause flickering result
I see! I tested 2 of them and had a few issues with them, both flickering but also that I have to turn the knob all the way up to get it to start, it didn't turn on when it "clicks" so I first thought it was broken. Did you have this issue? I used the same led bulb for my other dimmer so that shouldn't be the issue I think
@@frankadrianart Yeah i tried couple edison bulbs, the bulb who has "support dimming" on their package was working fine and bulbs who hasnt was working with flickering till knob turned into max
The lamp I use is dimmable but still flickers with both of the cheaper dimmers. It says dimmable on the package and when I try it with my more expensive dimmer it does not flicker. I wonder why 🤔
@@frankadrianart You can look through Big Clive's teardown videos for similar items. There's an Aussie electric guy who may have covered how these dimmers work. The classic dimmer for an incandescent bulb works by turning "on" right at the zero crossing of the AC voltage and then turning "off" some time earlier than the next zero crossing. An LED bulb has an onboard power supply that produces the low DC voltage at constant current needed by the LEDs. In order to be "compatible" it has to watch for the break in the duty cycle and use that as a command for dimming; meanwhile, it needs to store enough power to ride out the break, which can be done either as part of the switching power supply or as a capacitor on the 5V side. The classic dimmer might not work well when a very low current is being drawn. That is the main source of such flickering. The newer dimmer will also use a triac but it turns "on" at some point before the zero crossing and turns "off" at the zero crossing. That is, the tail of the waveform rather than the leading. It uses more advanced electronics to control this precisely, and it's made to handle a load of 18W just as well as 60W.
Interesting video but the twist at the end was confusing. It felt like a sale video where the goal was to sell me one at the end (if I was interested). Even the lowering of the price from 200 € to 140 € had that clever effect where you suddenly think it's a great deal! :D But then it ends with: "You can't have it but you could become a seller of it if you join my Patreon." That's a massive twist I was not ready for.
I see how it can be confusing haha, but I tried to make a video where I kinda followed the progress of trying to sell one live but I had no idea how it would turn out. Then in the process when I had created a bunch of lamps (I actually sold a few more to some relatives) I realized what an hassle production was for me and not something I enjoyed at all! I rather just make more prototypes and maybe sell a few STL files so other people can create them at home. From a business perspective this was probably a confusing and quite bad move, but I mostly just try to enjoy this hobby and make a little bit of change. :)
I like this alot, so I subbed. I wanna see more designs, and to be honest I recently got into 3d printing, and I am interested in so much of this, I was thinking about just doing stuff on the side, but I feel like i could do this kind of stuff full time. I like the tinkering and building with my hands part, but I can't tell you how dumb I am with code n stuff. This is a really cool project and I want to see all the cool stuff you can come up with.
I'm glad you enjoy my design and video, thank you! My best tip for you is just to start, create stuff, try stuff, fail, and then fail some more! Don't think too much about making money or 3D printing full time to begin with, just experiment and have fun
Thanks, I finally found my video..... 🎉❤I study Electrical engineering also interested in Mechanical and learn solidworks cad software . I am interested in 3D printers and wanted to start a Business plan but I am not sure. when I research it most of them uses injecting Molding. Is 3d printer worth it to start up business? Thanks>❤❤❤
frank just found your video wanted to see how are you keeping up with the relamp? this is one of the most useful videoss ive found on building a product... you have the same printer i have, and the drive, what a encouraging vid you made brother
@@frankadrianart maybe "gangsta" is more appropriate than criminal. You are a G cause you are trying to succeed at something by not following or by breaking the rules 😉 I think that was what he meant... so keep being you, my friend.
It's PLA so it is 100% biodegradable under the right circumstances. Some countries have stations where you can recycle it and it will become new PLA material. Unfortunately a lot of it will still end up in a landfill where it takes 1000's of years to break down. But the PLA I used have at least been recycled once. Better than many other plastics? Yes. Will it solve the worlds ecological crisis? No.
I made also a night lamp with petg filament, leds and a controller with remote and app for change color etc, never though about selling these but i might reconsider
Hey Frank, I really like the design of the lamp, but I do not like the aesthetic of the base - in my opinion it does not fit the overall look of the amazing lampshade! If you do another version you might want to rethink the base! have a lovely day!
Thanks for the comment. I can see where you are coming from, it's a bit different than other table lamps and have a low profile. I did make several versions with another base but ultimately I settled for this design. 🤗
Hey, thanks for the informative video. Which Reflow Filament are you specifically using for the lampshade? They have rPLA in translucent, opaque and matte..
Hello! I love your video! I get a lot of inspiration! I loved the idea of the manual, I would like to know what it contains or what I should consider, since I would like to make a manual too! Thank you.
Hey, I'm glad you like it and I'm happy I could inspire you! If you ever make a lamp I'd love to see some images of it! :D The manual should contain a lot of things if you want it to adhere to CE-rules. Things like instructions, warnings, different languages, correct symbols etc. If you are a student you might get a hold of the "standardization" paper for free. And if you plan to sell your lamp in europe I suggest you contact a professional.
Hey thanks, I mention that in the video briefly. I mostly use my Bambu A1 but I used the Sovol v06 PLUS for this lamp since I needed a bigger buildplate. 😄
Hey Teddy, welcome! Currently I don't have a version that has a dedicated space for batteries. But there is quite a lot of space in the lampbase so I'm sure you could fit a rechargable device there and plug it into the led lamp.
Did you sell this design/idea to Crème Atelier in Sweden or did they copy you? Even the dimmer looks like the same model. Great design and inspiring way of thinking!
Hey! I'm thinking about buying your stl files for this lamp. I couldn't find anything about the dimmer tho. Can you tell me which dimmer you are using for this lamp please
Hey Dmritry! I'm glad you enjoy the lamp. Yeah I just updated two links to dimmers in the description, I tried two dimmers one cheap from amazon and one more expensive here in Sweden. I had flickering from the cheap one that I got from amazon, even tho it said "LED-dimmer", so not sure about the quality of that one. But I use the cheap one for my lamp at home currently and it's working fine, it's just not that sensitive (you only have two workable dimmer settings basically, bright and very low bright) The more expensive one is much more sensitive when dimming. Let me know if you need any help with printing.
It really depends on the producer. It can be medical trays and plastic bottles but also from waste from producing other 3D printed filament. check out reflow and formfutura which I used for my lamp :)
@@frankadrianart Reflow seems to be recycled for real. But formfutura is quite a stretch to say so, they just re-use they're "wastes" from pla production, not actually recycling other plastic...
@@TheDarknex I know! I noticed that too, reflow actually re-uses things other than filament waste, so they seem to be a little bit better in that area. I also thing their filament is of better quality than formfutura, so I'm exclusivly using reflow's filament for my rPLA now.
Hey. This will differ depending on your country, but CE certification is required to sell lamps in Europe. The CE is not something you "get", the manufacturer puts the CE certificate on the product and signs a contract. The contract states that the product is deemed safe. But to make it safe you have to perform a series of tests and have technical documentation. Easiest way is to reach out to Intertek or similiar instituation and pay them to get the test and documentation in proper order. Good luck! :D
Hmmmm. Have you considered local marketing and targeting the close proximity? I run a small side hustle of 3D printing stuff and almost all my clients are someone from close proximity. People I met somewhere, people in my rural area, colleagues etc. They tend to "spread the word" and tell their friends and relatives and this is how they can find me. Also I am really fond of the idea of local micro-manufacturing which reduces carbon footprint, no deliveries needed, etc.
I have considered it yes. I was about to make a deal with a local store but it's just too hard for me to scale production at the moment and they wanted too many copies. Currently selling the STL file and license to sell the lamp and I'm seeing some success in this area so I'm contend for now. IYea I'm also fond of that idea, more localized production is beneficial for most I think. good luck with your hustle :D
@@frankadrianart I can relate :D I also have issues with scaling. It is just a hobby - and doing it full time would require much more effort. But the idea is still intriguing to say the least. Thanks for the good will ;) Good luck for you as well :)
I agree with some other comments. Your video targets diyer and similar audience which are less likely to buy your lamp. I think you should work on your marketing
What do you mean? I have used the lamp myself for almost 6 months now and the only thing I've noticed is that it's gotten brittle. But as long as you are careful and don't drop the lamp it holds up very well
@@Sigma3dprints thanks! haha yeah I dropped one once and it broke a little bit, but I made a new one and now it just sits. It's very brittle but as long as it just sits there it's fine. Thanks
Korrekt! CE behövs om du vill sälja vissa produkter inom Europa. Lamparmaturer faller ofta under LVD (lågspänningsdirektivet) och behöver CE märkning. Om du kollar på videon så pratar jag om det. CE-märkning är någonting tillverkaren själv sätter på sin produkt.
What I have never understood, is when people price their product or service based off what everyone else does. This is very dangerous to the longevity of any business! Study some business finance and learn to price more effectively. Then once you have a target price, everything else in the background, i.e. overheads, can be tweaked to stay competitive, as well as keeping your growth projections in line. 😮
Nice work! I love the concept of a table lamp made of recycled materials. I envy the lucky buyer who helped you reach your goal!
Just from my own perspective: you focussed on the diy design/making process in your videos, to me as a maker that is interesting. But like you said to sell a 100+ lamp, you need to focus on interior design. So maybe still highlighting the recycled materials but filming in higher end locations etc could reach a different audience.
Thank you, you're totally right. Marketing is 80% of the work but a part that I don't enjoy as much as creating unfortunately. Maybe I'll make another marketing push when I got the energy and then I'll film in higher end locations as you recommend.
@@frankadrianart You know, I believe a lot of creative people really don't like marketing... to the point they go to work in a offline shop that sells their goods offline, and actually like this experience more then posting anything to youtube or instagram:)
NO one... let me repeat. No one who wants to splash their dollar on designer style products - CARE what its made out off... NO one givesa damn about if its recyccle and only gave off 0.000000001 carbondioxide footprint etc.
So focus on the design.
@@keithvlogs1 In fact, certain people might like it more if its dangerous and fucks up the environment since it's taking "value" away from other things. Humans are weird.
@@hydrocosmo if you really think rich people who uses their private jet to travel 50 miles care about the carbon footprint theyre saving from buying *recycled* lamp shade...
you better slap your self so you can wake up to reality 🤣🤣
I found the format and content of this video especially insightful as someone also wanting to start a 3D printing business. Keep it up :)
Thanks mate! It's tough but also very fun and rewarding. I love my lamp 😄
It looks amazing bro. Keep up the good work.
Hi Frank, I am a designer myself with SLA and FDM printers. I also have friends that sell custom stuff, and most on Etsy. I think that is the platform for these custom made items. You lamp price would be around 138 euro. That is very decent for a custom lamp. I really like your design. You also have to realise that making a good video or checking the stats of you video isn't a clear indication that the most viewed video is the best content you made. RUclips's algorithm is all over the place. I have reposted the same videos (shorts) and the algorithm sometimes pushed the video to 10k views, while other attempts resulted in 80 views, 200 views, of even 5 views. But keep making cool products and maybe open an Etsy store. That is your audience right there.
Hey, nice to hear! I've sold on Etsy as well in the past but I've felt the page has changed a lot in the recent years. I've seen lot of non hand made items being sold and to get any good exposure there you really need to pay for ads. My page works fine for selling and is much cheaper to maintain and list than etsy, (altough less organic traffic ofc). But I may give etsy another shot.
Very good point on the youtube algorithm, views don't have to mean success!
Thank you again for your comment and good luck with your designs too
Design is cool and it is nice to make something to make you proud of something. Design will be sold once the people are ready!
Thank you Jelle 😄
5:42 Just to add a point, yes, your time is valuable based on your skills and for cases where you apply those skills.
However, the assembly may not require the same set of skills
And like we cannot have Steve Jobs be a street vendor and charge the same amount for the products saying his time is valuable - the value should be put in context.
This is why outsourcing can be useful. Like the Unix philosophy do one thing and do one thing well, and optimize by maybe enlisting the help of someone interested and patient enough to do the things that you don't like
The end consumer just looks at the overall value and not who did what. 😅
But good overall design BTW.
I love the lamp. Great design. The simplicity of it is ideal for a workspace or bedroom. That said, I would love to see the bottom done with recycled wood. I think adding wood to it would give it a more organic feel.
Definitely would be very cool with wood as a base! I'm not great with wood tho, but it's a cool idea
@@frankadrianart There is a wood type filament though.
@@CorinneIsIn Oh that's neat, maybe I'll order some and try :D
@@frankadrianart definitely worth a look! That wood filament is very cool
Hi Frank, I'm thinking about designing and selling items with my 3D printer. This video is very informative and such a real experience, thank you. BTW your lamp looks amazing!
I'm glad you enjoy it! Feel free to reach out to me if you ever have any questions or need any help 😊
Tremendous job. Curious what bulb wattage that can be used with PLA? LED?
3:51 bro i have exact same dimmer and its not flickering at all, it depend on your bulb or led light. Some of them support dimming and some of them not and that cause flickering result
Yes, I think this dimmer is not designed for LED lamps and that's the problem, not the quality.
I see! I tested 2 of them and had a few issues with them, both flickering but also that I have to turn the knob all the way up to get it to start, it didn't turn on when it "clicks" so I first thought it was broken. Did you have this issue?
I used the same led bulb for my other dimmer so that shouldn't be the issue I think
@@frankadrianart Yeah i tried couple edison bulbs, the bulb who has "support dimming" on their package was working fine and bulbs who hasnt was working with flickering till knob turned into max
The lamp I use is dimmable but still flickers with both of the cheaper dimmers. It says dimmable on the package and when I try it with my more expensive dimmer it does not flicker. I wonder why 🤔
@@frankadrianart You can look through Big Clive's teardown videos for similar items. There's an Aussie electric guy who may have covered how these dimmers work.
The classic dimmer for an incandescent bulb works by turning "on" right at the zero crossing of the AC voltage and then turning "off" some time earlier than the next zero crossing.
An LED bulb has an onboard power supply that produces the low DC voltage at constant current needed by the LEDs. In order to be "compatible" it has to watch for the break in the duty cycle and use that as a command for dimming; meanwhile, it needs to store enough power to ride out the break, which can be done either as part of the switching power supply or as a capacitor on the 5V side.
The classic dimmer might not work well when a very low current is being drawn. That is the main source of such flickering.
The newer dimmer will also use a triac but it turns "on" at some point before the zero crossing and turns "off" at the zero crossing. That is, the tail of the waveform rather than the leading. It uses more advanced electronics to control this precisely, and it's made to handle a load of 18W just as well as 60W.
Would love to see a cad tutorial for this. Was it done in rhino? Great work.
cool, looks like the long form video might have a chance :)
Interesting video but the twist at the end was confusing. It felt like a sale video where the goal was to sell me one at the end (if I was interested). Even the lowering of the price from 200 € to 140 € had that clever effect where you suddenly think it's a great deal! :D But then it ends with: "You can't have it but you could become a seller of it if you join my Patreon." That's a massive twist I was not ready for.
I see how it can be confusing haha, but I tried to make a video where I kinda followed the progress of trying to sell one live but I had no idea how it would turn out. Then in the process when I had created a bunch of lamps (I actually sold a few more to some relatives) I realized what an hassle production was for me and not something I enjoyed at all! I rather just make more prototypes and maybe sell a few STL files so other people can create them at home.
From a business perspective this was probably a confusing and quite bad move, but I mostly just try to enjoy this hobby and make a little bit of change. :)
I like this alot, so I subbed. I wanna see more designs, and to be honest I recently got into 3d printing, and I am interested in so much of this, I was thinking about just doing stuff on the side, but I feel like i could do this kind of stuff full time. I like the tinkering and building with my hands part, but I can't tell you how dumb I am with code n stuff. This is a really cool project and I want to see all the cool stuff you can come up with.
I'm glad you enjoy my design and video, thank you!
My best tip for you is just to start, create stuff, try stuff, fail, and then fail some more!
Don't think too much about making money or 3D printing full time to begin with, just experiment and have fun
Thanks, I finally found my video..... 🎉❤I study Electrical engineering also interested in Mechanical and learn solidworks cad software . I am interested in 3D printers and wanted to start a Business plan but I am not sure. when I research it most of them uses injecting Molding. Is 3d printer worth it to start up business? Thanks>❤❤❤
frank just found your video wanted to see how are you keeping up with the relamp? this is one of the most useful videoss ive found on building a product... you have the same printer i have, and the drive, what a encouraging vid you made brother
As we say in Brazil: "Every day a malandro and a mané walk the streets, when they meet, business happens."
Keep being the malandro, my friend.
What's a malandro my friend? I googled but all I found was "criminal"? 😳
@@frankadrianart maybe "gangsta" is more appropriate than criminal. You are a G cause you are trying to succeed at something by not following or by breaking the rules 😉 I think that was what he meant... so keep being you, my friend.
@@HzGP Thanks for the translation :D
Is the plastic used for the shade infinitely recyclable or will it ultimately end in a landfill.
It's PLA so it is 100% biodegradable under the right circumstances. Some countries have stations where you can recycle it and it will become new PLA material. Unfortunately a lot of it will still end up in a landfill where it takes 1000's of years to break down. But the PLA I used have at least been recycled once.
Better than many other plastics? Yes.
Will it solve the worlds ecological crisis? No.
Great content! Thank you! I love the lamp!
I made also a night lamp with petg filament, leds and a controller with remote and app for change color etc, never though about selling these but i might reconsider
Hey Frank, I really like the design of the lamp, but I do not like the aesthetic of the base - in my opinion it does not fit the overall look of the amazing lampshade! If you do another version you might want to rethink the base! have a lovely day!
Thanks for the comment. I can see where you are coming from, it's a bit different than other table lamps and have a low profile. I did make several versions with another base but ultimately I settled for this design.
🤗
Hey, thanks for the informative video. Which Reflow Filament are you specifically using for the lampshade? They have rPLA in translucent, opaque and matte..
Are you using a dimmer with a led lamp?
Yes a dimmable led lamp
Hello, where can you buy that dimmer for a lamp that he built. thank you
Hey which one? I got the cheap one on amazon for about 70sek the other I bought here in Sweden for 400sek
@@frankadrianart Hi Frank! Would you happen to have a link for the more expensive one by any chance?
www.hornbach.se/p/sladdimmer-vadsbo-cd50-vit/10258492/
Hello! I love your video! I get a lot of inspiration! I loved the idea of the manual, I would like to know what it contains or what I should consider, since I would like to make a manual too! Thank you.
Hey, I'm glad you like it and I'm happy I could inspire you! If you ever make a lamp I'd love to see some images of it! :D
The manual should contain a lot of things if you want it to adhere to CE-rules.
Things like instructions, warnings, different languages, correct symbols etc.
If you are a student you might get a hold of the "standardization" paper for free. And if you plan to sell your lamp in europe I suggest you contact a professional.
Hi Frank, great design i would like to know what printer are you using?
Hey thanks, I mention that in the video briefly.
I mostly use my Bambu A1 but I used the Sovol v06 PLUS for this lamp since I needed a bigger buildplate. 😄
Great video. What filaments did you use?
Thank you! I cover that in the video
@@frankadrianart sorry I meant the brand. It looks like a really good quality print
@@Zen-fiSounds Thanks! I cover that in the video aswell :)
Formfutura and reflow
Hi frank I subscribed to your Patreon .would like to know if you have a version can be with only batteries ? Rechargeable ?
Hey Teddy, welcome! Currently I don't have a version that has a dedicated space for batteries. But there is quite a lot of space in the lampbase so I'm sure you could fit a rechargable device there and plug it into the led lamp.
Excellent video. Thanks
i miss this old discovery channel show so much
what do you mean? :D
Nice video and nice design, what material did you use for this? I guess PLA but is it just regular PLA or transparent or which is it?
Thank you, I cover this a bit in the video. It's a white recycled PLA. Not transparent
You should sell one without the tech like it's just the 3d printed parts so it's a diy project
That's a good idea, thanks
you could build your own high quality dimmer for like 1 dollar.
Did you sell this design/idea to Crème Atelier in Sweden or did they copy you? Even the dimmer looks like the same model.
Great design and inspiring way of thinking!
Thank you!
No they released their design back in 2022 I think.
The dimmer is here from Sweden that's probably why.
Hey! I'm thinking about buying your stl files for this lamp. I couldn't find anything about the dimmer tho. Can you tell me which dimmer you are using for this lamp please
Hey Dmritry! I'm glad you enjoy the lamp. Yeah I just updated two links to dimmers in the description, I tried two dimmers one cheap from amazon and one more expensive here in Sweden.
I had flickering from the cheap one that I got from amazon, even tho it said "LED-dimmer", so not sure about the quality of that one. But I use the cheap one for my lamp at home currently and it's working fine, it's just not that sensitive (you only have two workable dimmer settings basically, bright and very low bright)
The more expensive one is much more sensitive when dimming.
Let me know if you need any help with printing.
Hi!, which software do you use to model this?
Where does recycled PLA come from? I don't know about it other than its use as filament. What common items get recycled that are made from PLA?
It really depends on the producer. It can be medical trays and plastic bottles but also from waste from producing other 3D printed filament.
check out reflow and formfutura which I used for my lamp :)
@@frankadrianart Reflow seems to be recycled for real. But formfutura is quite a stretch to say so, they just re-use they're "wastes" from pla production, not actually recycling other plastic...
@@TheDarknex I know! I noticed that too, reflow actually re-uses things other than filament waste, so they seem to be a little bit better in that area. I also thing their filament is of better quality than formfutura, so I'm exclusivly using reflow's filament for my rPLA now.
Hi, which brand and series of 3D printer you used for this specific lamp form?
Any fdm printer will do the work. The only thing to consider is the build volume. If you want to print big thing, go look for at least a 30x30x30cm
Hey I mainly used Sovol V06 Plus for this lamp. Any 3d printer work as long as its big enough
what a clever guy.
rare
nice but i think we shouldnt justify price by cost - the reality is that price is decided by value
can you explain how to get the CE marking?
Hey. This will differ depending on your country, but CE certification is required to sell lamps in Europe.
The CE is not something you "get", the manufacturer puts the CE certificate on the product and signs a contract. The contract states that the product is deemed safe. But to make it safe you have to perform a series of tests and have technical documentation. Easiest way is to reach out to Intertek or similiar instituation and pay them to get the test and documentation in proper order.
Good luck! :D
@@frankadrianart thank you !!
@@frankadrianart How much did you pay for it?
Hmmmm. Have you considered local marketing and targeting the close proximity? I run a small side hustle of 3D printing stuff and almost all my clients are someone from close proximity. People I met somewhere, people in my rural area, colleagues etc. They tend to "spread the word" and tell their friends and relatives and this is how they can find me. Also I am really fond of the idea of local micro-manufacturing which reduces carbon footprint, no deliveries needed, etc.
I have considered it yes. I was about to make a deal with a local store but it's just too hard for me to scale production at the moment and they wanted too many copies. Currently selling the STL file and license to sell the lamp and I'm seeing some success in this area so I'm contend for now. IYea I'm also fond of that idea, more localized production is beneficial for most I think.
good luck with your hustle :D
@@frankadrianart I can relate :D I also have issues with scaling. It is just a hobby - and doing it full time would require much more effort. But the idea is still intriguing to say the least. Thanks for the good will ;) Good luck for you as well :)
I agree with some other comments. Your video targets diyer and similar audience which are less likely to buy your lamp. I think you should work on your marketing
Thank you! Yes it's tough being a one man show, creator, marketer 😅
But I'm learning
Interesting
Congratulations :)
You can print with Nylon, why could you not print the cable ties? Just a cost effectiveness thing or what?
Definitely could! Actually changed the design a little bit too, the cable relief can be screwed on with 3dprinted screw now.
Good video but I have to say one thing pla does not hold up well in light it will get weak
What do you mean? I have used the lamp myself for almost 6 months now and the only thing I've noticed is that it's gotten brittle. But as long as you are careful and don't drop the lamp it holds up very well
@@frankadrianart yeah thats what I mean it will get brittle
So be careful with it
@@frankadrianart you should print it out of Asa it's uv resistant
@@Sigma3dprints thanks! haha yeah I dropped one once and it broke a little bit, but I made a new one and now it just sits. It's very brittle but as long as it just sits there it's fine. Thanks
Cool project 👍🏼 I could print this lamp for you, if you have any customers in Switzerland
Är din lampa CE-märkt? Man får väl inte sälja lamparmaturer i Sverige utan sådan märkning?
Korrekt! CE behövs om du vill sälja vissa produkter inom Europa. Lamparmaturer faller ofta under LVD (lågspänningsdirektivet) och behöver CE märkning. Om du kollar på videon så pratar jag om det. CE-märkning är någonting tillverkaren själv sätter på sin produkt.
What I have never understood, is when people price their product or service based off what everyone else does. This is very dangerous to the longevity of any business! Study some business finance and learn to price more effectively. Then once you have a target price, everything else in the background, i.e. overheads, can be tweaked to stay competitive, as well as keeping your growth projections in line. 😮
Good tip!
nice!