"Action Lab" has a video where he uses this technique to make rainbow colored chocolate. The video is called; "Using Quantum Mechanics to Make Holographic Rainbows on Chocolate".
Another Hack ive used myself, I wanted to draw an image onto plexiglass. So I put my sheet of plexiglass on my bed, removed the filament, heated the nozzle, adjusted the speed and VOILA!!... I drew a Homer Simpson face INTO a sheet of plexiglass just by melting the lines with no extrusion. You just have to adjust your Z-height into the negatives and be careful. Subtractive manufacturing using an additive machine!
That's brilliant!!! I've been thinking of converting an old printer into a laser but this technique would likely work for my intended application. I mostly just want text. I'm going to try for sure.
YOU MUST DO THIS SUPER WELL VENTILATED AREA AND IT MUST BE ACRYLIC. Acrylic does not emit toxic or dangerous fumes when laser-cut, unlike PVC which can release chlorine gas, and polycarbonate which can produce carbon monoxide. Just keep that in mind when experimenting. At this point, you're basically following laser cutting safety. That's just for anyone that might want to try this. I'm sure OP is aware. Carry on.
Well, I would use a laser engraver for that, since I have access to one. You apparently don't, and this has lead you to think outside the box and come up with a brilliant solution. Respect!
iirc in opals its not just the surface that is causing the effect but the actual layering of the particles within the opal that give it its colors. This is why you can polish them without the color going away.
@@MTG_Music You are correct yeah! It has something to do with super tiny silica spheres or lattices or something. It's called the "opalescence", which is a fun name for it.
Crystal structures are wild, see sodium acetate - that's almost hairy. But I didn't know PLA would have the refraction properties to make this effect pop!
8:08 Pro tip: use square nuts instead of hex nuts if possible. Easier to plan, top and bottom of the hole can be the same size, and more area to keep the nut in place. Only downside is you probably have like 100 hex nuts in your house already, but need to buy square nuts.
I once printed some designs on fabric in TPU. They were somewhat like old engineering drawings so lots of thin lines. The print kept separating from the fabric too easily. What I found saved the whole project was combination of baking paper and ironing. It took few tries to get the temperature right but then I was able to put some smooth plywood under the fabric, baking paper wax side down on top of the printed side of the fabric and iron over the paper. This re-melted the TPU a little while pressing it hard into the fibres of the fabric. The final result looked good and felt durable. I think it even survived some trips through a washing machine on "delicate" settings.
The 3D printing directly on to a shirt seems like a gimmick at first, but you can use it as a template to do bleached shirt designs. Night Hawk In light did a video years ago on how to make shirts this way, but its really time consuming using freezer paper like he does, especially for intricate designs.
On thingiverse there have been ender 3 attachments that use the extruder motor to actuate a syringe filled with silk screen plastisol inks directly onto fabric without the silk screen for years now.
Fabric be darned: "Darning is a traditional method for repairing fabric damage or holes that do not run along a seam, and where patching is impractical or would create discomfort for the wearer, such as on the heel of a sock." 100
This was a fun one playing a game of 'have I done this'.. A bunch of these were from before the days of metal build plates, so it was clips around the edge of the glass sheet to hold fabric in place. Billie's ones with magnets in the edges make for fun clip-on clothing. And made a bunch of entrance/ID tags for a makerspace using NFC tags and dual colour prints, also lots of fun. Including one with embedded magnets and a reed switch that would change tag ID when you flipped over a part. Glad that worked on the first try because I'm never doing it again!
I did a custom printed t-shirt a couple of years ago, I used normal TPU and it worked great! I wear it on a regular basis and it has 2 years worth of wash and dry cycles on it, it still looks as good as the day I printed it! Its a great converstation started lol.
Zack, the level of production and detail you do is simply amazing for each video. Just when I think you make a mistake, you have a later b-roll clip of you correcting that very thing. Love the effort man. That said, your perfection doesn’t determine your value. We love you dude. Don’t burn yourself out though. Have fun doing what you do and we will continue to enjoy it.
On the PLA and PETG not sticking part, you can also make jointed parts using that technique. It's similar to how joints in Gundam toys are made, except there they are double-shot injection molded ABS and PP, another pair of incompatible materials. If it's a vertical joint, just make two parts with zero clearance and one will mold perfectly over another, making a smooth joint that will release with some gentle persuasion. PETG's low coefficient of friction helps. It doesn't work as well across layer lines so there a bit of clearance might be needed, but it's still more precise and has more potential for geometry than single-material print-in-place parts.
This looks like the "Billy Reuben" episode. I know she did a lot of the early work on printing onto fabrics. AND YOU CREDITED HER! You are awesome, Zack.
Good tip on gluing the magnets. I ran into that issue just last week with my new printer. I have always used manual bed leveling before this latest batch of printers.
In all sincerity, you’re very clever, creative and fun to watch. Loved the projects that you showed in this video. Thanks for being so informative and entertaining at the same time
You could probably print on things that dont need washing as often as a shirt, like a hat (beanies, flat brim hats etc), scarf, fabric belt, bandanna, back pack (top flap style I imagine but itd be some clever positioning), you get the idea lol.
But in case you dont: pet sweaters, wrist wrap, dog leash, removable hood from a winter jacket, purse or fanny pack strap, print your own Hitai-ate (Naruto headband), sash of all varieties (glow in the dark would be cool for a crossing gaurd, cloth shower curtains, curtains, old-school toilet seat lid cover, laundry bag, painters tarp, reusable grocery bag, smart pots, flags (could probably print one on a peice of fabric too). Just off the top of my head 😂. Now go open an etsy store and sell me something cool that I'm too lazy to make.
Could make some interesting temporary "3D tattoos" by printing a collection of small shapes on a thin, nude wig-lace and blending over the lace with makeup.
This is hilarious, I’ve been printing for many years now and got into printing shirt designs JUST TWO DAYS AGO for the first time, and this comes out! Printing onto baking sheets ended up…. poorly, despite caking on 10 layers of gluestick. Awesome coincidence and great video :)
Can’t wait for the new app that ranks space filling curves by hotness! 😂 Prusa has a 3d printable raised platform for printing on tshirts on mk3 style printers. There is also a video on how to use it, for anyone who is interested.
I will never not watch through all the patron shout-outs. Despite the excellent, entertaining, and informative content throughout the rest of your videos, the one-take shout-outs are my favorite bits.
It might make sense to compare that dual-material filament to something like labradorite. It gets it's colors from two materials that "alloy" at high temperature, but form little plates as it cools down.
17:26 - so... use a white/light-color shirt, do the TPU print for a negative of the design, dye the whole shirt a second darker color, then wash the TPU out free emulsion, without the caustic chemical to strip the emulsion from fabric after the fact...
I kept thinking you had an eye infection, but its the color of your teleprompter. Oddly glad I realized this I was worried you had bad eye stuff for months.
If you use 2 layers of petg and alternate the infill direction, you get this amazing pattern that bends light through it. I made tree ornaments this way using transparent green petg, then added a border and raised text using opaque red petg. Playing with speed and temperature will adjust how transparent it is. Print hot for better results.
“Eldritch sorcery that man was not meant to know, or the ladies, or the cyborgs” not sure if you meant to imply enbies are cyborgs but speaking as one, I’m here for it
you know I give you a lot of credit for being the only channel that I don't fast forward the sponsored part of the video. you keep it interesting for sure
3:53 “These spinning shurikans shiny starbursts and spectacular spectra spring solely from super small scratches on this special spring steel surface.” Nice
Haha I've had one of those fancy build plates sitting in my shopping cart. I just haven't pushed the shiny button yet. Might as well replace it with the affiliated one
Another way to do this with the Tshirt is by heating the very bottom layer and then sticking it to an already straightened tshirt, it really depends on what you prefer to do, but there are many ways to go about it. Doing it the way you mentioned in the video will likely require some more insane z offset configuring.
Technically any small sharp thing you throw at someone to distract them or lower their guard can be considered shuriken. So a kunai can be shuriken if you throw it, but usually they were melee weapons. Most historical shuriken were made out of common materials like nails.
I may use that shirt printing technique for a costume, I want a way to get really dark text on a commando sweater for a Cyberpunk 2020 cosplay so I can put corpo logos on it. The center of the costume is a 3d printed helmet cyberdeck that has LED lights come on when you lower the net goggles.
I've missed your streams! Loved them and the community that would always be there. Glad you're still doing them for the supporters. Looks like I need to be one!
R-Type Nylon rivets will change your 3d print prototyping and final output forever! I recommend then highly. Much easier to integrate and you can print the holes for them in any orientation. Better yet, they are reusable for the many prototypes we all go through.
In regards to that PLA/PETG cored filament - there's HexCore filament on printables that's a 2 material filament, so you can make similar filament if you have a prusaxl. I made tpu with a petg core that worked quite well.
One of the silliest things I've ever done was churn it through a text to speech with the worst voice I could find (Will: From Far Away). It's 3h long and almost unlistenable, but it's perfect.
Have you tried printing a thin layer on the inside surface of the T-shirt so that the print sandwiches the cloth to make it washable without disintegrating? Another thought I had is that I wonder if there is a flexible filament that can reach a transition state at less than 90 degrees Celsius. Such a material + fabric that will not combust at that period would allow you to print on the shirt, flip it inside out, place it on a holographic build plate, turn it on and wind up with a hologram t-shirt.
Just add some thread with a sewing machine to the perimeter of each printed section; it would really look cool with contrasting threads. Or you could just do perimeters first then add some fabric glue to the center before the first layer goes all the way down, that would bond it much better. Both of these methods will also make it more durable and washable.
A trick I found with magnets is some tend to demagnetize when heated up or at least weaken. Sooooo put them on the build plate as you are printing and then insert while hot. When it cools, the magnets are magnetic again (hopefully if they didn't get too hot) and it's less likely to stick to the extruder. I've tried glue, but I find what happens is it then gets stuck and pulls the whole thing off the build plate.
Oh, hey, using diffraction grating as a mold! Evan&Katelyn used that same concept to make holographic resin, and Anne Reardon HowToCookThat made holographic chocolate!
How to 3d print T Shirt Step 1: Buy a T Shirt... Bruh, this video contains a lot of useful information, you don't need cheap clickbait like that. Or maybe it's just me who thought he would 3d print a T Shirt literally instead of screen printing a graphic onto a T Shirt using a 3d printer?
17:28 Hard pass. I used to work in an apparel printing factory. NEVER wear new shirts (or any clothes) without washing them once. They are *filthy* , just as a matter of course.
How the "holographic" build plate works and transfers colour just based on its shape blew my mind
RIGHT. I pretty much said "HOLY CRAP!"
Similar to how our eyes have colors, it is all because of the structure causing light to reflect/refract.
Next is press that into the tshirt
"Action Lab" has a video where he uses this technique to make rainbow colored chocolate. The video is called; "Using Quantum Mechanics to Make Holographic Rainbows on Chocolate".
imagine buying two plates and squeeze pieces of chocolate between them to get "holographic" double sided chocolate coins.
Another Hack ive used myself, I wanted to draw an image onto plexiglass. So I put my sheet of plexiglass on my bed, removed the filament, heated the nozzle, adjusted the speed and VOILA!!... I drew a Homer Simpson face INTO a sheet of plexiglass just by melting the lines with no extrusion. You just have to adjust your Z-height into the negatives and be careful. Subtractive manufacturing using an additive machine!
That's brilliant!!! I've been thinking of converting an old printer into a laser but this technique would likely work for my intended application. I mostly just want text. I'm going to try for sure.
Now THAT is cursed. And brilliant.
YOU MUST DO THIS SUPER WELL VENTILATED AREA AND IT MUST BE ACRYLIC.
Acrylic does not emit toxic or dangerous fumes when laser-cut, unlike PVC which can release chlorine gas, and polycarbonate which can produce carbon monoxide. Just keep that in mind when experimenting. At this point, you're basically following laser cutting safety. That's just for anyone that might want to try this. I'm sure OP is aware. Carry on.
Well, I would use a laser engraver for that, since I have access to one. You apparently don't, and this has lead you to think outside the box and come up with a brilliant solution. Respect!
@@willsintheairi converted my old ender into a laser and it works insanely well
4:30 fun fact, this is also how opals get their hazy colorful glow. Same with certain types of butterflies. Science is crazy
iirc in opals its not just the surface that is causing the effect but the actual layering of the particles within the opal that give it its colors. This is why you can polish them without the color going away.
@@MTG_Music You are correct yeah! It has something to do with super tiny silica spheres or lattices or something. It's called the "opalescence", which is a fun name for it.
And some bird feathers, beetles and even blue/green human eyes!
Crystal structures are wild, see sodium acetate - that's almost hairy. But I didn't know PLA would have the refraction properties to make this effect pop!
I adore structural colour so much, it fascinates me
I used TPU on me socks to make custom print grippy socks
Omg dude, genius lmao. I gotta do that. Any special setup? How did u get the sock to stay flat on the bed?
Any STL or instructables guide?
is it grippy?not your socks🍑
WOW that's a fantastic idea! New Christmas gifts for all my friends that love grippy socks!
Trying to embed prints inside of prints might make me obsessed with trying to work it into stuff.
8:08 Pro tip: use square nuts instead of hex nuts if possible.
Easier to plan, top and bottom of the hole can be the same size, and more area to keep the nut in place.
Only downside is you probably have like 100 hex nuts in your house already, but need to buy square nuts.
i have a meccano collection (intended) for prototyping so actually i've got heaps of spare square nuts! such a great tip, thanks :D
Wait that's actually genius, excuse me while I check amazon brb
I have deez nuts
nuts can be squares?
I once printed some designs on fabric in TPU. They were somewhat like old engineering drawings so lots of thin lines. The print kept separating from the fabric too easily. What I found saved the whole project was combination of baking paper and ironing. It took few tries to get the temperature right but then I was able to put some smooth plywood under the fabric, baking paper wax side down on top of the printed side of the fabric and iron over the paper. This re-melted the TPU a little while pressing it hard into the fibres of the fabric. The final result looked good and felt durable. I think it even survived some trips through a washing machine on "delicate" settings.
The 3D printing directly on to a shirt seems like a gimmick at first, but you can use it as a template to do bleached shirt designs. Night Hawk In light did a video years ago on how to make shirts this way, but its really time consuming using freezer paper like he does, especially for intricate designs.
On thingiverse there have been ender 3 attachments that use the extruder motor to actuate a syringe filled with silk screen plastisol inks directly onto fabric without the silk screen for years now.
Could also use the tulle method to make your own 3d printed silk screen mask.
@@bagok701 That sounds like a genius idea.
@@bagok701 Or lay stiff wire into channels, and glue them in place. Or using a 3d printing pen.
The alliteration at 3:53 was insane!
zack is one of the few people i pay attention to when he lists his patrons
Fabric be darned:
"Darning is a traditional method for repairing fabric damage or holes that do not run along a seam, and where patching is impractical or would create discomfort for the wearer, such as on the heel of a sock."
100
omg, permanently affixed lego socks. make every step as painful as the last
@@paulbunyangonewild7596 😈The question then becomes.. how do I sneak these onto my wife as she sleeps?🤔
"Why wold you ever need a wooden mushroom?"
LOOK I just DO, alright?!
This was a fun one playing a game of 'have I done this'.. A bunch of these were from before the days of metal build plates, so it was clips around the edge of the glass sheet to hold fabric in place. Billie's ones with magnets in the edges make for fun clip-on clothing.
And made a bunch of entrance/ID tags for a makerspace using NFC tags and dual colour prints, also lots of fun. Including one with embedded magnets and a reed switch that would change tag ID when you flipped over a part. Glad that worked on the first try because I'm never doing it again!
I did a custom printed t-shirt a couple of years ago, I used normal TPU and it worked great! I wear it on a regular basis and it has 2 years worth of wash and dry cycles on it, it still looks as good as the day I printed it! Its a great converstation started lol.
Zack, the level of production and detail you do is simply amazing for each video. Just when I think you make a mistake, you have a later b-roll clip of you correcting that very thing. Love the effort man.
That said, your perfection doesn’t determine your value. We love you dude.
Don’t burn yourself out though. Have fun doing what you do and we will continue to enjoy it.
On the PLA and PETG not sticking part, you can also make jointed parts using that technique. It's similar to how joints in Gundam toys are made, except there they are double-shot injection molded ABS and PP, another pair of incompatible materials. If it's a vertical joint, just make two parts with zero clearance and one will mold perfectly over another, making a smooth joint that will release with some gentle persuasion. PETG's low coefficient of friction helps. It doesn't work as well across layer lines so there a bit of clearance might be needed, but it's still more precise and has more potential for geometry than single-material print-in-place parts.
"It's not a benchy, it's just a bench!" XD
This looks like the "Billy Reuben" episode. I know she did a lot of the early work on printing onto fabrics. AND YOU CREDITED HER! You are awesome, Zack.
You could combine the shirt print one of the "holographic" build plates to make the shirt print iridescent.
And that, dear content creators, is how you do sponsorships. No temu or BH crap, but the actually fantastic kiwico.
That alliteration at 4 minutes was insane
Good tip on gluing the magnets. I ran into that issue just last week with my new printer. I have always used manual bed leveling before this latest batch of printers.
Jesus Christ, a My Immortal reference was not how i expected to start my day
I missed it. What was it?
4:50
In all sincerity, you’re very clever, creative and fun to watch. Loved the projects that you showed in this video.
Thanks for being so informative and entertaining at the same time
You could probably print on things that dont need washing as often as a shirt, like a hat (beanies, flat brim hats etc), scarf, fabric belt, bandanna, back pack (top flap style I imagine but itd be some clever positioning), you get the idea lol.
But in case you dont: pet sweaters, wrist wrap, dog leash, removable hood from a winter jacket, purse or fanny pack strap, print your own Hitai-ate (Naruto headband), sash of all varieties (glow in the dark would be cool for a crossing gaurd, cloth shower curtains, curtains, old-school toilet seat lid cover, laundry bag, painters tarp, reusable grocery bag, smart pots, flags (could probably print one on a peice of fabric too). Just off the top of my head 😂. Now go open an etsy store and sell me something cool that I'm too lazy to make.
I don't remember if you were getting sponsors before, but I am glad you are getting them now! Take that nearly free monay!
Could make some interesting temporary "3D tattoos" by printing a collection of small shapes on a thin, nude wig-lace and blending over the lace with makeup.
10:04 That's my purse! I don't know you!
I never felt more owned by a RUclips Video ;-) then by this section
This is hilarious, I’ve been printing for many years now and got into printing shirt designs JUST TWO DAYS AGO for the first time, and this comes out! Printing onto baking sheets ended up…. poorly, despite caking on 10 layers of gluestick. Awesome coincidence and great video :)
Can’t wait for the new app that ranks space filling curves by hotness! 😂
Prusa has a 3d printable raised platform for printing on tshirts on mk3 style printers. There is also a video on how to use it, for anyone who is interested.
I will never not watch through all the patron shout-outs. Despite the excellent, entertaining, and informative content throughout the rest of your videos, the one-take shout-outs are my favorite bits.
It might make sense to compare that dual-material filament to something like labradorite. It gets it's colors from two materials that "alloy" at high temperature, but form little plates as it cools down.
The fact that the washer removes the TPU looks like a water to get a new design with each wash
Awesome video i Learned so much
The build plate pattern is useful for making chocolate look like sorcery with rainbows
Just time time for 4/20, Zack teaches us how to make sweet hidden stash boxes. In case of emergency, break Mario question block for edibles, lol.
The pattern on the back side of the carbon fiber plate is actually “forged carbon fiber”
17:26 - so... use a white/light-color shirt, do the TPU print for a negative of the design, dye the whole shirt a second darker color, then wash the TPU out
free emulsion, without the caustic chemical to strip the emulsion from fabric after the fact...
I kept thinking you had an eye infection, but its the color of your teleprompter. Oddly glad I realized this I was worried you had bad eye stuff for months.
Those hologram colours are so Rubik's magic but shinier!
You know you're a nerd when you're watching these and don't even own a 3D Printer.
That's one way to call me out.
😂
...yet
Same. I'm on the brink of taking the plunge, so I'm cramming tips and tricks to help guide my journey.
I have AnkerMake m5
If you use 2 layers of petg and alternate the infill direction, you get this amazing pattern that bends light through it. I made tree ornaments this way using transparent green petg, then added a border and raised text using opaque red petg.
Playing with speed and temperature will adjust how transparent it is. Print hot for better results.
“Eldritch sorcery that man was not meant to know, or the ladies, or the cyborgs” not sure if you meant to imply enbies are cyborgs but speaking as one, I’m here for it
Yep, he does
Zack is very lgbt inclusive. Cyborgs are anything inbetween! And since this is a techy/nerd channel. It fits perfectly.
It's a play on how he usually starts a video: "Ladies, gentlemen and cyborgs: ..."
you know I give you a lot of credit for being the only channel that I don't fast forward the sponsored part of the video. you keep it interesting for sure
3:53
“These spinning shurikans shiny starbursts and spectacular spectra spring solely from super small scratches on this special spring steel surface.”
Nice
dude youre quickly becoming one of my favorite people to watch. all the adhd/autism nods and concessions keep me here. youre dope and thankk you
Okay, the Tenten mirrors-on-the-ceiling chunin exam reference just earned you a sub. Love this.
I literally recommend your channel to other YTers all the time, so much stuff I don't think they're thinking of!
We need more of these cursed techniques!
Haha I've had one of those fancy build plates sitting in my shopping cart. I just haven't pushed the shiny button yet. Might as well replace it with the affiliated one
Another way to do this with the Tshirt is by heating the very bottom layer and then sticking it to an already straightened tshirt, it really depends on what you prefer to do, but there are many ways to go about it. Doing it the way you mentioned in the video will likely require some more insane z offset configuring.
If you wanna really see how durable your 3d prints can be, you should look into visiting a local robot combat league.
10:45 TPU actually sticks very well to both PLA and PETG, if you have enough surface area to work with you dont need any mechanical interlocking.
It's interesting I just came across a holographic build plate for cheap and got it not knowing for sure what it was. Now I do! Let the fun begin!
This is probably my favorite video you've ever done. Everything in here is cool af.
These Spinning shurikens shiny starbursts and spectacular spectra spring solely from super small scratches on this special spring steel surface
🔥
To be veridicalous 🤓, shuriken means any throwable knife, so...
Kunai doesn't count because it's a type of spade.
PA and ABS/ ASA are also great support materials for each other. PLA, and PETG work both ways as well.
Technically any small sharp thing you throw at someone to distract them or lower their guard can be considered shuriken. So a kunai can be shuriken if you throw it, but usually they were melee weapons. Most historical shuriken were made out of common materials like nails.
@10:02 I feel personally attacked
I may use that shirt printing technique for a costume, I want a way to get really dark text on a commando sweater for a Cyberpunk 2020 cosplay so I can put corpo logos on it. The center of the costume is a 3d printed helmet cyberdeck that has LED lights come on when you lower the net goggles.
I've missed your streams! Loved them and the community that would always be there. Glad you're still doing them for the supporters. Looks like I need to be one!
You know your good when the viewers thumbs up the video before it begins
I'm happy I stayed up instead of sleeping
video is about over now, go to between its done
I know nothing about 3D printing but I really like these videos
R-Type Nylon rivets will change your 3d print prototyping and final output forever! I recommend then highly. Much easier to integrate and you can print the holes for them in any orientation. Better yet, they are reusable for the many prototypes we all go through.
@7:55 I have to tip my hat sir. That's the best one liner I've heard in a while. 👏 👏 😅
In regards to that PLA/PETG cored filament - there's HexCore filament on printables that's a 2 material filament, so you can make similar filament if you have a prusaxl. I made tpu with a petg core that worked quite well.
I came for the 3D printing (NICE) and stayed for the alliteration
I hate to call you a "RUclipsr"... but, you are now my favorite RUclipsr
Can use the T-Shirt technique for 3D printing silk screens?
The My Immortal reference made me cackle
One of the silliest things I've ever done was churn it through a text to speech with the worst voice I could find (Will: From Far Away). It's 3h long and almost unlistenable, but it's perfect.
I was not expecting it
@@blueberry1c2the Internet Historian's reading of it was the best version of it ever.
"otherwise possible projects" perfect wording
Have you tried printing a thin layer on the inside surface of the T-shirt so that the print sandwiches the cloth to make it washable without disintegrating? Another thought I had is that I wonder if there is a flexible filament that can reach a transition state at less than 90 degrees Celsius. Such a material + fabric that will not combust at that period would allow you to print on the shirt, flip it inside out, place it on a holographic build plate, turn it on and wind up with a hologram t-shirt.
Videos on modeling please. It is barely covered across all channels. Seeing more of the different viewpoints and methods is a big help.
May I suggest I new vid on what you learned so far from 3d printing so far and tip for beginners??
love the legends of the hidden temple shoutout
18:68 I thought bambu used a nozzle load cell as well
Just add some thread with a sewing machine to the perimeter of each printed section; it would really look cool with contrasting threads. Or you could just do perimeters first then add some fabric glue to the center before the first layer goes all the way down, that would bond it much better. Both of these methods will also make it more durable and washable.
Bro why is this Born On Board explaining this shit to us? DURANDAL! One of your minions escaped containment again.
Literally the best kiwico AD!
A trick I found with magnets is some tend to demagnetize when heated up or at least weaken. Sooooo put them on the build plate as you are printing and then insert while hot. When it cools, the magnets are magnetic again (hopefully if they didn't get too hot) and it's less likely to stick to the extruder. I've tried glue, but I find what happens is it then gets stuck and pulls the whole thing off the build plate.
Oh, hey, using diffraction grating as a mold! Evan&Katelyn used that same concept to make holographic resin, and Anne Reardon HowToCookThat made holographic chocolate!
For those that need more invis 'ink" for their 'kid' you can use a cheap highlighter marker liquid and water it down to make it pale enough
4:40 "Structural Color" is SO fascinating! and to think a bunch of the research came from Beetles! 🤣
I love how creative these Ideas are !!
Heck yeah another episode. Consider this already good evening engoodened.
This is my favorite video so far, can't wait for part 2
Thanks to KiwiCo for sponsoring Zack. This is a match made in sponsorship heaven.
14:30 I can confirm everything he has said. Except the chest hair part. I haven't tested.
See you at RMRRF Zack!
This one tickled my pickle.
14:31
Laughed Out Loud for completely relatable reasons!
YOINK!
It's so nice seeing my local-ish filament maker in your video! Atomic Filament!!!
Rewatched this vid like 4 times already. Love the vid lots of good info
Yohooo! This is me from the past! I already dropped prints into other prints back in 2012! :D Awesome stuff.
4:03 you ought to laser etch a custom Voidstar Labs diffraction grating build plate for the store.
How to 3d print T Shirt
Step 1: Buy a T Shirt...
Bruh, this video contains a lot of useful information, you don't need cheap clickbait like that.
Or maybe it's just me who thought he would 3d print a T Shirt literally instead of screen printing a graphic onto a T Shirt using a 3d printer?
Seriously Zack got some massive skills .....THX for these ideas
Those build plates are crazy!
Boom! Totally Blown Away!
I actually had time to understand what you were saying. Thank you for slowing down.
17:28 Hard pass. I used to work in an apparel printing factory.
NEVER wear new shirts (or any clothes) without washing them once.
They are *filthy* , just as a matter of course.
It would be cool to see if there are other filaments that would work on shirts. I would love to see a video on it.
Those reprap festivals look scary.
I use nylon nuts and bolts to secure things in prints all the time without using metal, and they're just as paintable and corrosion resistant too.