Dangerous Ladies' 3D model for Ingrid's summer beach lance.
Model by Jennifer Rezny (@quicksparrows)
.stl format. Pre-sliced for printing on both a 20cm and 30cm tall bed.
Luin requires a 3/4" PVC pipe for the handle; this handle is intended to be 61" (for a total finished length of 72") but you can drop it or extend it as desired to make it taller. You can also use a 1" dowel instead of a 3/4" PVC pipe, but the fit will be a little loose.
We have included a whole version of the coral blade for people with larger printers who may want to experiment, as well as a whole version of the star head that'll fit on a 300mm tall printer.
We suggest printing the coral blade key (that connects it with the neck) with extra thick walls; you can make it removable for storage or travel if you only glue it into one side.
We've also made the bottom lips of the bevels extremely thin, down to 0.4mm; in our experience most printers can handle this just fine, but it's meant to be very thin so you can bodyshop/sand out the bevel so it seamlessly transitions into the handle. If your printer can't go all the way to the finest edge of these pieces without failing to extrude, that's okay! Just assemble it anyway and smooth it out with bondo, acrylic green, or any other filler and sand until it looks like one piece.
Files include:
- Reference images
- .stl files
We printed ours at 0.1 and 0.15mm layers. We suggest keeping a moderate infill (no lower than 15%) and walls of about 1-1.2mm.
Please do not redistribute or resell. Intended for personal use only. Commercial use must buy a new copy for each item produced.
Feel free to tag us to show us what you print and make! We love to see finished works.
http://dangerousladies.storenvy.com
http://twitter.com/dangerousladies
http://instagram.com/thedangerousladies
Materials: digital file
Model by Jennifer Rezny (@quicksparrows)
.stl format. Pre-sliced for printing on both a 20cm and 30cm tall bed.
Luin requires a 3/4" PVC pipe for the handle; this handle is intended to be 61" (for a total finished length of 72") but you can drop it or extend it as desired to make it taller. You can also use a 1" dowel instead of a 3/4" PVC pipe, but the fit will be a little loose.
We have included a whole version of the coral blade for people with larger printers who may want to experiment, as well as a whole version of the star head that'll fit on a 300mm tall printer.
We suggest printing the coral blade key (that connects it with the neck) with extra thick walls; you can make it removable for storage or travel if you only glue it into one side.
We've also made the bottom lips of the bevels extremely thin, down to 0.4mm; in our experience most printers can handle this just fine, but it's meant to be very thin so you can bodyshop/sand out the bevel so it seamlessly transitions into the handle. If your printer can't go all the way to the finest edge of these pieces without failing to extrude, that's okay! Just assemble it anyway and smooth it out with bondo, acrylic green, or any other filler and sand until it looks like one piece.
Files include:
- Reference images
- .stl files
We printed ours at 0.1 and 0.15mm layers. We suggest keeping a moderate infill (no lower than 15%) and walls of about 1-1.2mm.
Please do not redistribute or resell. Intended for personal use only. Commercial use must buy a new copy for each item produced.
Feel free to tag us to show us what you print and make! We love to see finished works.
http://dangerousladies.storenvy.com
http://twitter.com/dangerousladies
http://instagram.com/thedangerousladies
Materials: digital file
Dangerous Ladies' 3D model for Ingrid's summer beach lance.
Model by Jennifer Rezny (@quicksparrows)
.stl format. Pre-sliced for printing on both a 20cm and 30cm tall bed.
Luin requires a 3/4" PVC pipe for the handle; this handle is intended to be 61" (for a total finished length of 72") but you can drop it or extend it as desired to make it taller. You can also use a 1" dowel instead of a 3/4" PVC pipe, but the fit will be a little loose.
We have included a whole version of the coral blade for people with larger printers who may want to experiment, as well as a whole version of the star head that'll fit on a 300mm tall printer.
We suggest printing the coral blade key (that connects it with the neck) with extra thick walls; you can make it removable for storage or travel if you only glue it into one side.
We've also made the bottom lips of the bevels extremely thin, down to 0.4mm; in our experience most printers can handle this just fine, but it's meant to be very thin so you can bodyshop/sand out the bevel so it seamlessly transitions into the handle. If your printer can't go all the way to the finest edge of these pieces without failing to extrude, that's okay! Just assemble it anyway and smooth it out with bondo, acrylic green, or any other filler and sand until it looks like one piece.
Files include:
- Reference images
- .stl files
We printed ours at 0.1 and 0.15mm layers. We suggest keeping a moderate infill (no lower than 15%) and walls of about 1-1.2mm.
Please do not redistribute or resell. Intended for personal use only. Commercial use must buy a new copy for each item produced.
Feel free to tag us to show us what you print and make! We love to see finished works.
http://dangerousladies.storenvy.com
http://twitter.com/dangerousladies
http://instagram.com/thedangerousladies
Materials: digital file
Model by Jennifer Rezny (@quicksparrows)
.stl format. Pre-sliced for printing on both a 20cm and 30cm tall bed.
Luin requires a 3/4" PVC pipe for the handle; this handle is intended to be 61" (for a total finished length of 72") but you can drop it or extend it as desired to make it taller. You can also use a 1" dowel instead of a 3/4" PVC pipe, but the fit will be a little loose.
We have included a whole version of the coral blade for people with larger printers who may want to experiment, as well as a whole version of the star head that'll fit on a 300mm tall printer.
We suggest printing the coral blade key (that connects it with the neck) with extra thick walls; you can make it removable for storage or travel if you only glue it into one side.
We've also made the bottom lips of the bevels extremely thin, down to 0.4mm; in our experience most printers can handle this just fine, but it's meant to be very thin so you can bodyshop/sand out the bevel so it seamlessly transitions into the handle. If your printer can't go all the way to the finest edge of these pieces without failing to extrude, that's okay! Just assemble it anyway and smooth it out with bondo, acrylic green, or any other filler and sand until it looks like one piece.
Files include:
- Reference images
- .stl files
We printed ours at 0.1 and 0.15mm layers. We suggest keeping a moderate infill (no lower than 15%) and walls of about 1-1.2mm.
Please do not redistribute or resell. Intended for personal use only. Commercial use must buy a new copy for each item produced.
Feel free to tag us to show us what you print and make! We love to see finished works.
http://dangerousladies.storenvy.com
http://twitter.com/dangerousladies
http://instagram.com/thedangerousladies
Materials: digital file
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