Writing Postcards with a 3D Printer

(severinbucher.com)

32 points | by typesafeJ 3 days ago

10 comments

  • seemaze 27 minutes ago
    While I love the curiosity and creativity that has recently emerged around digital pen plotting, many people may not realize this was the workhorse technology for producing technical drawings for several decades in the late 20th century.[0]

    Large format pen plotters with up to 8 separate pens were available for different line weights. Color was mostly avoided because the reproduction process of the time was still centered around diazotype[1], or monochromatic ammonium blue printing.

    [0]https://piratefsh.github.io/2019/01/07/computer-art-history-...

    [1]https://drawingmatter.org/a-blueprint-is-blue/

  • GL26 40 minutes ago
    This makes me think of this guy : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XhUuhl9iWpQ&t=83s

    But you made it much more "leaner". I will try it on my Prusa

  • phren0logy 1 hour ago
    If this appeals to you, also check out the Plotter Art subreddit https://www.reddit.com/r/PlotterArt/
  • martin-adams 38 minutes ago
    About 15 years ago I used to have a Silhouette cutter printer. You could get a cutting blade and it would cut shapes out of paper and card. I remember putting a pen in there and using it to write with it on paper. It was cool.
  • _flux 40 minutes ago
    I've also used 3d printer to straight up print on top of a greeting card (the print was 1 layer).

    The print might not fare that well though the post system, though, so maybe it wouldn't be suitable for postcards. But it can be a nice touch.

  • lemonberry 46 minutes ago
    Great idea!!

    I've had a post card based business idea for ages. Can anyone recommend a printer that prints quality postcards? I'm looking for something in the sub $2,000 range. I pulled that number out of thin air so I have no idea of that's a too much or too little.

  • djmips 2 hours ago
    So does this mean if you give it a swivel knife it can also be a vinyl cutter?
    • voidUpdate 2 hours ago
      CNC is CNC, if you can put an attachment on it, it'll probably work. If you replace the hotend with a router and make the extrusion wires turn the router on and off, you have a CNC router. If you use a swivel knife, you have a vinyl cutter
      • IdiotSavage 35 minutes ago
        Only in theory. A 3D printer doesn't need to sustain lateral forces - a router does. It might not be built for this.
    • sanid 1 hour ago
      Yes, actually Bambulab (I know currently controversial) has just released a new printer (A2L) that actually has the cutter and pen functionality. You just clip it onto the printer head and it works. (This is not meant as an advert for them, not affiliated in any way. It's addons that other manufacturers will also add to their printers)
      • uberex 1 hour ago
        What has bambu been upto? Lol I got their printer, hadnt used it for months and printed something this weekend but haven't followed the news on them.
        • qubidt 1 hour ago
          open source license violations/takedowns of legitimate open source forks, and other anti consumer practices. casual users likely unaffected, unless you're philosophically offended (rightfully, imo)
  • xz18r 1 hour ago
    Not a 3D printer but really cool video by Stuff Made Here explaining how he tried to make 'realistic' handwritten forgeries with a pen plotter: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQO2XTP7QDw
  • crote 2 hours ago
    The Z-axis homing problem could be solved by adding a "pause" command (gcode M0, I reckon) at the very start.

    The printer calibrates, pauses, you attach the pen, press continue, and it'll do the plot without zeroing the Z-axis again.

  • stavros 2 hours ago
    Very nice! I used the same trick to make a PCB by making the printer use a marker to draw on the parts that I didn't want to etch:

    https://www.stavros.io/posts/make-pcbs-at-home/