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by skymer 1869 days ago
Wooden crafts (turned bowls, cutting boards, small sculptures, etc.) typically rely for their uniqueness on features of natural woods that this 3D printing method can't replicate. That includes unusual grains and burls, live edge, and gluing up multiple species.

From the few examples in their store, it looks like their main esthetic tool is lots of piercing. I wonder if their minimum hole size is small enough to improve on hand-held sandalwood fans?

1 comments

The wood propellas seem to have natural wood features. Are they just painted on to it?
A change of extruding temperature changes the color of the wooden filament and produces features like natural wood would have.
It's binder jet technology, so they are using some different way to vary the color or density.
They use a RAM 336 for printing it seems that the color modulation takes place in the curing process so heat is involved. In my experience there is no way to switch between different sands in process.
I had the same thought. The answer is actually in the text, took a while to find it:

"Forust’s 3D printed parts support a wide variety of wood grains at launch, including rosewood, ash, zebrano, ebony, and mahogany. The parts also support a range of wood stains such as natural, oak, ash, and walnut."

Yeah it seems it's just painted. So now you can't even trust wood anymore. Very tacky.