Hi NY friends!

I’m looking to get three 3D numbers made that will resemble hotel door numbers. They should be about 2" high, 3/8" thick and look like metal, but could be made out of plastic or resin if we can get the finish to look right.

Something like this: Hotel Door High-Res Stock Photo - Getty Images

Anyone out there able to create something like this?

Thanks!

Rachel

4 Likes

Hi Rachel,

to create models, that have a metal look, you can go with SLS printers, which sinter metal powder with a laser.

This technique can use all sorts of metals, with incredible details, but the prints are very expensive. With average prices of 10-20$ per cm³ printed, you will pay hundreds of dollars for your letters.

Resins can’t contain any composite to look like metal, you could only paint them.

Lastly (and this is, where I come in) there are FFF/FDM machines, which are the standard 3d printers.

These usually use colored plastic strings to melt in a nozzle and extrude your model.

The quality is decent, but more importantly the price per cm³ is very cheap.

As I said the plastic strings (called “filament”) are usually just normal plastic, but there are brands like Colorfabb or Proto Pasta, that produce filament out of common plastics blended with metal powder.

The available metal-plastic composites are:

bronze

copper

brass

stainless steel

iron (magnetic)

All of those (especially the first 3) are made to be polished, to look like metal.

I do offer bronze, copper and brass. I’ve printed, sanded, polished and finished several prints in all those three materials, and it would be no problem, to print those letters for you.

If needed I could also design the letters for you.

One of the first prints in brass was the 3dHubs mascot Marvin. Pictures of the print can be seen below.

If you want to get in contact with me to get your own brass print made, you can contact me via my hub at:

www.3dhubs.com/siegen/hubs/marius

Just start an enquiry (“contact this hub”), to discuss further details.

Colorfabb (the producer of bronze, copper and brass) is setteled in europe and due to incredibly high shipment cost, there are only a few hubs in america, that offer those metal composites, especially because the brass composite is their newest invention and not that popular so far.

Although I don’t live in America, it wouldn’t be a problem to print the models for you (upon request sanding, polishing etc. can be done). The shipment cost is fairly low, from my experience it’s 15$, but for larger orders it’s free!

Kind regards,

Marius Breuer

PS: the brass print looks greenish due to a special polish, that I used. Your polish can be customly changed. Sharp edges and cavities aren’t polishable, that’s why you see some unpolished material at the edge of Marvins face and in his eyes.

The metal composites can be sanded to get a flawless smooth surface, in the case of Marvin, I selected 0,15mm layer resolution, theoretically I could go up to 0,05mm, but usually this isn’t necessary due to the ease of sanding.

Hi Rachel I am in NYC and can print in bronzefill and brassfill filament. As I think Marius said below, it’s not quite as shiny as the numbers in your image, but it looks quite nice.

See here for some examples:

Feel free to get in touch if you’d like to discuss.

https://www.3dhubs.com/new-york/hubs/fusible

Best,

Chris

Hi Rachel,

As Chris and Marius said, you can print in bronzefill or brassfill and have your prints polished to achieve a nice metal effect. This is a good option, and there are plenty of hubs able to print with these materials. However, the material costs are higher and to get a good metallic finish you need to do a significant amount of sanding and polishing.

A much cheaper option would be to print the item in a common plastic (PLA, ABS) have the item finished, sanded or vapor smoothed, and painted with metallic gold enamel paint. I think that you could achieve the same if not better results at a much lower cost, since you will be able to use low cost plastics and relatively cheap model paint.

Feel free to contact me:
https://www.3dhubs.com/new-york/hubs/minuteman-miniatures

Mike
Minuteman Miniatures - NJ
Testors Gold.jpg

I can cut and polish this numbers from real bronze.

http://formovka.blogspot.com/2014/11/photo\_93.html

Hi Chris! Thanks for your response!

Something like the attached would be perfect. How long does it take to create something like this?

Thanks!

Rachel

Hi Rachel,

How many numbers do you need and approximately what size?

Do you have models already made, or do you need them created?

If you start a quote process from my hub, then we can speak directly.

Best,

Chris

How quickly do you need these? I am just starting to experiment with some material that is capable of looking like the specified materials.

Hey there, what’s the turn around time on this? Trying to get my hands on these by the end of the week.

Thanks!

Hi there! I need them by friday, unfortunately. Let me know if you think that’s possible?

Thanks!

It’s possible. Depending on how many numbers and the size.

Hi,

we can print with gold color filament ABS that will resemble gold metal color if that is good for you, please visit my hub to order. Thanks

wow! Man. This is an amazing Marvin. You should post this on one 3dhubs.com/talk/Marvin

Marius,

What process are you using to achieve such a nice finish on these pieces? Sanding and polishing by hand makes my hands cramp up! :wink:

Thanks,

Mark

I first used a bit of sandpaper to remove blobs on the outside, then I started with steelwool to bring the metal look out. After that I proceeded with polishing disks (clothlike disks). My preference were 100mm diameter disks on a drill press at slow speeds around 500rpm or lower, faster speed heats the model and deforms it. Before polishing I held a file to the spinning disk to clean it, after that I held a pre-polishing paste to the wheel and polished the print. Next up the last step again, but with the final polishing paste/block. For finer details I used the same method but on a dremel. Optional you can use polishing bg liquids like brasso instead of the buffing wheel, I used both :wink: