3D Printing

digital culture

FabCafe, a Collaborative 3D Vision For Coffee Shops

Enter Starbucks on a weekday morning, and it'll likely be filed with Work From Home warriors, emailing, freelancing, and PowerPointing between latte sips.

Enter Starbucks on a weekday morning, and it'll likely be filed with Work From Home warriors, emailing, freelancing, and PowerPointing between latte sips. Free, reliable WiFi is a tech-savvy worker necessity, but for those with more tactile creative pursuits, the traditional coffee shop scene isn't conducive to, say, creating a line of wallets to sell on Etsy or experimenting with the latest in 3D printing technology. Specific needs like these are what caused Tim Wong to open FabCafe in the Shibuya neighborhood of Tokyo, as he told us at this year's SXSW Interactive.

Alongside the usual cafe fare like caffeinated drinks and small bites is the heart of Tim's vision, a studio where local designers can rent use of a laser printer to cut from Adobe Illustration files for about $20 per 30 minutes. Rather than going the way of a Kinko's where people come in to use the machines and leave in a hurry, FabCafe draws the local design community with artist lectures and workshops.

The workshops are when the six 3D printers are put to use, since the cost of the materials and machines makes regular renting of them less than feasible. Look for more FabCafe locations to open in Taipei and Barcelona this year. Take a look at some of the cafe's work, and tell us: what would you do at FabCafe if you had the chance?

fashion news

Cara Delevingne Covers Plastic Dream; Is Kate Spade the New J.Crew?

Karl Lagerfeld photographed Cara Delevingne for the cover of Plastic Dreams' Winter 2013 issue.

  • Karl Lagerfeld photographed Cara Delevingne for the cover of Plastic Dreams' Winter 2013 issue. [Yahoo! News]

  • Kimberly Ovitz says that 3D printing may revolutionize the way brands handle supply and demand. [The Business of Fashion]

  • Tennis star Novak Djokovic is set to appear in his first ad campaign for Uniqlo after becoming brand ambassador last year. [WWD]

  • Christie Brinkley may join the cast of The View. [Styleite]

  • Could Kate Spade outpace J.Crew? Some insiders think so. [Racked]

  • Natalia Vodianova will receive the Inspiration Award at this year's DVF Awards ceremony. [Style.com]

  • Karin Gregersen has been named the new president of Vince. [WWD]

  • This is what it would look like if nostalgic childhood cartoons like Doug, My Little Pony, and Pokémon collaborated with designers. [Lucky]

Tech Style

The First Digitally Made 3D Dress Has Arrived

A 3D printer has been on our wish list for a while, along with a 3D-printed lamp and 3D-printed photo booth — OK, 3D-printed anything, really!

A 3D printer has been on our wish list for a while, along with a 3D-printed lamp and 3D-printed photo booth — OK, 3D-printed anything, really! But a 3D-printed gown? That wasn't even on our geek-girl Spring 2013 fashion radar. In New York City this week at the Ace Hotel, burlesque superstar Dita Von Teese arrived wearing the world's first 3D-printed dress. Designed by Michael Schmidt and Francis Bitonti, then printed with a Shapeways 3D printer on powdered nylon, the analog had no place in the creation of this dress.

WhoSay - Photo from Dita Von Teese

The creation was designed on an iPad to Dita's exact measurements, critiqued via Skype, and then digitally rendered before sending to Shapeways. The usual pencil-to-paper sketching and fabric draping sounds practically primitive when compared to the powerful software, Rhino and Maya, used by the designers. Is this the first look at a sartorial future of completely customizable attire, no tailor required? Would you buy into a new 3D fashion trend?

fashion news

Paul Smith Gets Musical and Dita Von Teese Gets Dressed in 3D

David Bowie has tapped longtime friend Paul Smith to design the official t-shirt for Bowie's upcoming album, The Next Day.

Editor's Pick

iWant: A 3D Family Holiday Portrait

Posing for family portraits is usually a cringe-worthy obligatory holiday tradition, but if those portraits were 3D-rendered, well, that's a different story.

Posing for family portraits is usually a cringe-worthy obligatory holiday tradition, but if those portraits were 3D-rendered, well, that's a different story. Omote 3D in Tokyo, Japan, has made a different kind of fantasy tech gift come to life with the world's first 3D printing photo booth. This is not the dorky-glasses-necessary three-dimensional "experience" either, this is the tangible, real-life kind of 3D.

Prices range from $262 for a single small figurine to $1,445 for three large figurines, which is a steal for a plastic 3D model of your family, though, you know, there are no other competitors currently. Think of all the fun the miniature you can have. The pop-up studio is open until Jan. 1, 2014, so make reservations and book your flights soon. Click on for more photo booth figurines, info on how the 3D modeling process works, and where you can sign up ASAP.

Tech News

Design Your Own Hi-Tech Lamp

We're often hearing of new advances in 3D printing, but has the technology shown up in your everyday life much yet?

We're often hearing of new advances in 3D printing, but has the technology shown up in your everyday life much yet?

The 3D printed table lamp kit from i.materialise puts 3D technology and industrial design in your power. The company will provide all the software required to design a lamp within the proper dimensions yourself. Once your concept is finalized, submit the rendering back to i.materialise, and its 3D printers will get to work on a lamp shade all your own.

Included in the $260 3D table lamp kit is the lamp base, reference lamp shade for use before the 3D design is ready, and light components. For design inspiration, check out the company's examples on Flickr. Where else would you like to see 3D printing put to use?

Shoes

3D Couture: Shoes Printed For Your Feet

I'm inspired by fashion in general, but when you add a geeky twist, I get really excited.

I'm inspired by fashion in general, but when you add a geeky twist, I get really excited. My latest obsession? 3D printed shoes. You know 3D printing — it's where you "print" an actual object layer by layer. You can make furniture, household items, nearly anything with a 3D printer.

Now, designer Naim Josefi has created a pair of sustainable 3D-printed shoes that fit the wearer perfectly. How does it work? A scanner analyzes your foot, then the dimensions are sent to a 3D printer to craft your 3D "couture" kicks. It seems you'll need some strong ankles to prevent from pulling a Gaga in these heels, but it's a pretty impressive process that allows you to enjoy the perfect fit (no more band-aids or blisters!), while you save the planet at the same time — the shoes are made from sustainable materials.

Still wondering how the heck these shoes are made? Check out the demo video after the break.