The Arizona Republic

Home furnishing­s are a click of ‘print’ button away

- By Sarah Wolfe

Looking for that perfect light for your home office? A new chair or coffee table? You might try making it yourself, at home, with just the click of a button.

Three-dimensiona­l printing, a novelty once reserved for science fiction, is going mainstream thanks to cheaper, more accessible technology.

The printers, which now cost as little as $300, use lasers to blast out layer upon layer of plastics or other materials, forming 3-D objects.

And if you don’t have the time, money or inclinatio­n to invest in a 3-D printer of your own, there are hundreds of websites selling lights, coasters, sculptures, furniture and even wallpaper crafted by 3-D printers.

New York-based Shapeways, for example, allows users to make, buy or sell three-dimensiona­l designs. Products include a delicate, twig-like egg cup for $8 and a lamp that looks like a nuclear mushroom cloud for $1,389.

“We are consistent­ly amazed by the incredible uses our customers find for these materials,” says Alex English, owner of the 3-D printing plastics retailer ProtoParad­igm.

Just some of the decor items you can buy or build with 3-D printing:

Lighting: Among the most popular — and dramatic — 3-D products for the home are lights, whether ceiling pendants, table lamps or floor lamps.

Belgium’s .MGX by Materialis­e, a pioneer in 3-D printing, is known for museum-quality, futuristic designs. Among the most popular is the Bloom table lamp (about $2,600), a flower-bud inspired design with joints that you can expand or collapse to release or contain light, says marketing manager Katrien Vandenplas.

Shapeways offers dozens of lamps created by some of the site’s more than 11,000 “shop owners,” or designers. The honeycomb-inspired Veroni lampshade, for instance, costs as little as $15 and comes in a variety of colors and materials ranging from the standard plastic to raw metal and steel.

Wall hangings: Statement pieces for your walls run the gamut in the 3-D printing world.

Shapeways’ ethereal “Whales” ($48) lends modern sophistica­tion with its airy rendition of two swimming whales crafted from white plastic. They almost seem to spring off the wall. Floridabas­ed Proton 3D Studio offers a little kitsch with a Pop Artlike plastic Pi symbol ($21) and the word “geek” crafted in orange plastic script lettering ($24).

Sweden’s Kredema Design has one of the more “off the wall” home-decor products: a three-dimensiona­l wallpaper that rolls out away from the wall to form shelves, magazine holders and even lampshades. Made from sheets of acrylic and wallpaper, the “Off the Wall” collection is available by special order only.

Accessorie­s: From picture frames to vases and even planters, you can design or find just about anything homerelate­d using 3-D printing technology.

Shapeways recently added glazed ceramic to its list of materials, making it possible to craft personaliz­ed plates, mugs, salt and pepper shakers, and other items for the table.

Blogger and tech consultant Michael Sitver designed some personaliz­ed coasters in about 90 minutes using a 3-D CAD software called Autodesk Inventor. He printed them up at Shapeways’ website.

“This is a great project for beginners,” says Sitver, of Weston, Conn. “because designing it doesn’t take too much work, but it helps beginners get acquainted with the tools involved and the process.”

He calls his new coasters a “wonderful conversati­on piece.”

Furniture: It might sound like a tall order, but it’s possible to craft tables, chairs and other furnishing­s with 3-D printers as well.

They’re not cheap though, at least not yet.

A day bed crafted from white nylon plastic will run you nearly $20,000 on Shapeways, while .MGX by Materialis­e offers several chairs, stools and tables that look more like works of art than something to sit on. They also run into the thousands.

But there’s a lot that’s still possible with this burgeoning technology, especially as it gets cheaper and more accessible.

“When kids are exposed to this technology, they don’t even blink an eye when something is printed,” Vandenplas says. “When they are older, 3-D printing will fit into their lives much like the Internet and smartphone­s fit into our lives today.”

 ?? AP ?? This table was designed after the growth patterns of trees.
AP This table was designed after the growth patterns of trees.
 ?? AP ?? A table lamp that takes its name and shape from a mushroom.
AP A table lamp that takes its name and shape from a mushroom.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States