TFW2005
Hisstank
Thundercats
TokuNation
Toyark
Home
News
Marvel Toy News
DC Toy News
Star Wars Toy News
Video Game Toy News
Dragonball Z Toy News
MOTU Toy News
San Diego Comic Con
Toy Fair
All News Categories…
JUMP OFF!
NYCC Round Up
SDCC Round Up
S.H.F Dragonball Z
Photo Shoots
Quick Shots
Toy Fair Round Up
Forum
New Posts
News and Rumors
Action Figure GD
Marvel Forum
Customs
Fan Art
Collection Showcase
Buy Sell Trade
Companies
Tamashii Nations
McFarlane
Hasbro
NECA
Mezco
Super7
Mattel
Diamond Select Toys
Storm Collectibles
Hot Toys
Sideshow
Characters
Batman
Superman
Iron Man
Spider-Man
Wolverine
Hulk
Green Lantern
Captain America
Boba Fett
Scale
3.75 Inch
6 Inch
7 Inch
1/6
Sub-Lines
SH Figuarts
DC Multiverse
Marvel Legends
Black Series
One:12 Collective
Super 7 Ultimates
Vintage Collection
Masterverse
MOTU Origins
The Toyark
>
Toyark Toy Forums
Integration
User Name
Remember Me?
Password
Rules
Register
Members List
Search
Today's Posts
Mark Forums Read
Thread
:
DC 3.75/4" Appreciation Thread
View Single Post
08-25-2022, 04:38 PM
#
9946
Madame Warlock
Join Date: Jul 2015
Location: Ireland
Posts: 853
Quote:
Originally Posted by
vindowviper
Blender is intimidating to me, too. I was watching some tutorial videos this week and mustered up enough motivation to try my hand at modifying some 3d stl's I downloaded. I found a human foot design on thingiverse, downloaded the .stl, imported it in Blender, then used 'decimate' to simplify the geometry and then saved it again as an stl. I had to simplify it because it had too much geometry for sketchup to handle. I opened it in sketchup 2017 (last desktop free version, and far more user friendly than Blender), and created a sphere over the ankle, selected all, and intersected the faces with the selection. Then I just deleted the sphere and leftover geometry above the foot, scaled it to the proper size, used the "inspect and repair extension (a must-have for 3d printing), and exported it as an stl again.
For 3d printing, I have an Anycubic Photon Mono (sla resin printer), and I recently bought the flexible tough resin, which is amazing for figures and accessories, by the way. I printed the feet in clear resin and they are strong and have some flexibility to them (not brittle like basic resin). I'd say this resin is about as flexible and durable as professionally made action figures. Now I just need to drill for the ankle pegs and figure stand holes, paint the feet, and attach them to the figure.
I would not recommend 3d printing joints or other figure parts (other than heads) in standard resin since it is so brittle. I would also recommend against printing using filament (fdm printing), save for vehicles, large accessories, or diorama components, unless you are okay with less detail. They would probably work okay for inner joint parts of figures, if you have a small enough nozzle, though.
IF you file and prime and stuff you can get fine results with FDM for action figures tbh. If you're looking to do really detailed high definition stuff you'll struggle but if you're talking about the quality of most Marvel Universe figures you'll be fine.
__________________
Looking for:
JLU Big Barda. YJ Martian Manhunter & Miss Martin. Drop me a PM!
Madame Warlock
View Public Profile
Send a private message to Madame Warlock
Find More Posts by Madame Warlock
Latest Toy Discussion
Hiya Toys News Reveals and Chat
Macross Appreciation Thread
DC Multiverse and all McFarlane DC News Reveals and Chat
The "Look At What I Just Got!" Thread
Gong Action Figures
Hot Toys, Mondo, Threezero and 1/6th News Reveals and Chat
Star Wars Black Series, Vintage Collection and Retro News Reveals and Chat
Trick or Treat Studios News Reveals and Chat
The NECA News Reveals and Chat Thread - Everything NECA
Revoltech, Mafex, Square and Figma News Reveals and Chat
Latest Marvel Discussion
New Marvel Legends/6" Appreciation Thread
New Marvel 3.75" Appreciation Thread
Latest Customs and Fan Art
Judge Dredd
DC Batman Beyond - 6" ML Style
Batman
Latest Collection Pics
Spastic for Plastic
My Rotating Figure Display
My Mixed Collection
Brotherhood of mutants
Joshytheimporter collection IMPORTSSS
Latest B/S/T
Pop Mart x D.C. The Monsters Labubu and Robyn Yaya
Original 1980's Voltes V Volt-in Box made in Japan
Original 1980's Voltes V Volt-in Box made in Japan