“First 3D-printed book cover” created with a MakerBot

3D-printed book cover of On Such a Full Sea by Chang-rae Lee created with a MakerBot

News: US publisher Riverhead has collaborated with 3D-printing firm MakerBot to create the first printed book sleeve.

A desktop MakerBot Replicator 2 was used to print the slipcase for Korean-American writer Chang-rae Lee’s futuristic novel On Such a Full Sea, released on 7 January.

“We think the 3D-printed slipcase for On Such a Full Sea is a work of art, and one we are very proud to have helped create,” said MakerBot CEO Bre Pettis.

3D-printed book cover of On Such a Full Sea by Chang-rae Lee created with a MakerBot

The case was designed by Riverhead art director Helen Yentus and members of MakerBot’s in-house design team.

The title lettering is extruded and stretched across the white printed sleeve, as a continuation of the flat writing on the yellow hardback tucked underneath.

“What I like about this project is that it re-introduces the idea of the book as an art object,” said Lee. “Content is what’s most important, but this [3D edition] is a book with a physical presence too.”

3D-printed book cover of On Such a Full Sea by Chang-rae Lee created with a MakerBot

The technology was used as an experimental proposal for the future of books covers, which the designer says are becoming less significant as digital books are more widely read.

“We’ve talked a lot about what’s going to happen to books and cover designers if covers aren’t necessarily going to be the focus anymore,” said Yentis in a film about the book. “We’re looking for new ways to present our books.”

Only 200 copies have been produced with the printed covers, each signed by the author. These limited editions are on sale for $150 (£91) and the book is also available with an alternative hardback cover, as well as an electronic version.

When Dezeen spoke to Pettis in 2012, he told us that cheap 3D printers mean manufacturing can again take place at home – read the full interview here.

More information from the publishers follows:


3D-printed slipcase for hardcover of Lee’s latest novel On Such a Full Sea

In an unprecedented and innovative format, award-winning and Pulitzer Prize–nominated author Chang-rae Lee debuts his new novel, On Such a Full Sea, with a first-of-its-kind 3D printed slipcase, printed on a MakerBot Replicator 2 Desktop 3D Printer.

This highly anticipated new novel, set in a dystopian future America, comes as a signed limited edition hardcover with a custom 3D printed slipcase, designed by Helen Yentus and MakerBot. Only 200 of the 3D printed slipcases will be sold.

“What I like about this project is that it re-introduces the idea of the book as an art object,” said Lee. “Content is what’s most important, but this [3D edition] is a book with a physical presence, too. Of course I hope what’s inside is kinetic, but the physical thing isn’t normally meant to be. This edition feels as if it’s kinetic, that it has some real movement to it. It’s quite elegant as well.”

In talking about the 3D printed slipcase that was made on a MakerBot, Lee noted, “It’s all about changing the familiar. That’s ultimately what all art is about. That’s what we all do as writers.”

Though it won’t be released until January, On Such a Full Sea has been lauded and highlighted in all of its early reviews: “An astonishing feat of encapsulated genius from the inimitable Lee… Brilliant… A heart-thumping adventure,” said Library Journal. Booklist said On Such a Full Sea is “Always entrancing and delving…. Takes a truly radical leap in this wrenching yet poetic, philosophical, even mystical speculative odyssey…. Electrifying.” And Kirkus described the novel as “a harrowing and fully imagined version of dystopian America… Welcome and surprising proof that there’s plenty of life in end-of-the-world storytelling.”

Chang-rae Lee using a MakerBot Replicator 2 to create his 3D-printed book cover
Chang-rae Lee using a MakerBot Replicator 2

Chang-rae Lee is a deeply influential writer who tells stories about race, class and immigrant life in America. He has built a dazzling reputation as “a spellbinder” (Hartford Courant), “a master craftsman” (Washington Post), and “an original: (Los Angeles Times), and has been honoured with top prizes, including a PEN/Hemingway Award, Dayton Literary Peace Prize, and Asian American Literary Award; been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize; nominated for the Neustadt International Prize for Literature; and selected for the New Yorker’s “20 Writers for the 21st Century” list.

“We are honoured to work with Chang-rae Lee and Riverhead Books,” noted Bre Pettis, CEO of MakerBot. “We think the 3D printed slipcase for On Such a Full Sea is a work of art, and one we are very proud to have helped create.”

On Such a Full Sea is a bold and thrilling departure from Lee’s previous novels. In On Such a Full Sea, Lee has turned his acute eye toward the future of America. The story takes place in a chilling dystopia, a century or so beyond the present, where abandoned post-industrial cities like Baltimore have been converted into forced labor colonies and populated with immigrant workers. China is a distant, mythical memory. Environmental catastrophes have laid waste to much of the world, a cancer-like disease has infected the entire population, and stratification by class and race is more pronounced and horrific than ever. The fate of the world may lay in the hands of one tiny, nervy girl named Fan, an enigmatic and beautiful fish-tank diver who jolts the labor colony by running away.

Epic in scope, masterful in execution, and page-turning right to the shocking end, On Such a Full Sea fires on many levels: it is simultaneously a heart-stopping survival adventure across the wasteland of a wrecked continent; a deeply moving story of a girl’s first love; and a searing, frightening commentary on where America may be headed if we don’t strive to do better. The Boston Globe writes that Lee “asks the crucial and abiding question: How do we live a kind and decent life in this woeful world?” On Such a Full Sea imagines a future in which that question is more urgent than ever, and challenges us to ask what we need to change today.

Chang-rae Lee is the author of Native Speaker, winner of the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award for first fiction; A Gesture Life; Aloft; and The Surrendered, winner of the Dayton Peace Prize and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Selected by The New Yorker as one of the “20 Writers for the 21st Century,” Lee is professor in the Lewis Center for the Arts at Princeton University and a Shinhan Distinguished Visiting Professor at Yonsei University.

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Verlan Dress by Frances Bitonti and New Skins Workshop students

New York designer Francis Bitonti worked with students to 3D-print this dress using commercially available MakerBot machines (+ movie).

Francis Bitonti created the dress while leading a three-week digital fashion workshop over the summer, which aimed to introduce students to computer software and additive manufacturing equipment.

“The project wasn’t to design a garment, the project was to design a method of making form on the computer that could be deployed across the body,” said Bitonti.

Verlan Dress by Francis Bitonti

During the New Skins Workshop, students experimented with form-building software and created samples of their designs using the 3D printers.

“The MakerBot provided the students a direct link with the material world,” said Bitonti. “While they’re working on all these complex computer simulations they were able to get tactile, physical results through the MakerBot.”

Interim reviews of the groups’ work took place with guest critics, including designer Vito Acconci, who chose their favourite 3D-printed dress designs to develop.

Intricate patterning from one group and the silhouette from another were combined to create the final design, which was then printed in sections using a new flexible filament created by MakerBot.

“The idea was to create a landscape of geometric effects, things that would have different material behaviours in different parts of the body,” Bitonti said.

The result was a garment that referenced muscle fibres, veins and arteries to look like an inside-out body. It was named Verlan Dress after the French slang word for the reversal of syllables.

The workshop took place at the Digital Arts and Humanities Research Centre of the Pratt Institute in New York.

Bitonti previously worked with designer Michael Schmidt to create a dress for burlesque dancer Dita Von Teese using selective laser sintering. We’ve also featured 3D-printed clothing by Iris van Herpen and Catherine Wales.

Last month Microsoft began selling MakerBots in its US stores, while Makerbot unveiled a prototype of a desktop scanner earlier in the year. Read more about 3D printing in our one-off magazine Print Shift.

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Microsoft to sell MakerBot 3D printers in American stores

MakerBot 3D printers to be sold in Microsoft stores

News: computer and electronics retailer Microsoft has become the first US retailer to sell MakerBot’s desktop 3D printers on the shop floor for customers to take home on the same day.

Microsoft has partnered with 3D printing manufacturer MakerBot to offer customers the chance to buy their own MakerBot Replicator 2 Desktop 3D Printer from 18 retail stores across the USA. This move makes Microsoft the first retailer to sell MakerBot’s desktop printers outside of the company’s own New York store. Microsoft store customers will also be able to buy the PLA bioplastic material used by the printer and in-store 3D printing demonstrations will be available.

MakerBot has been testing 3D printing demonstrations at Microsoft stores in Seattle, San Francisco and Palo Alto, offering consumers a firsthand experience of 3D printing.

“We’ve seen tremendous interest and enthusiasm at the three initial ‘MakerBot Experience’ stores,” said MakerBot CEO Bre Pettis. “Rolling the program out to 15 additional Microsoft Stores supercharges our mission to bring 3D printing to more people.”

MakerBot 3D printers to be sold in Microsoft stores

At the 3D Printshow in London last year, MakerBot CEO Bre Pettis told Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs that “cheap 3D printers mean manufacturing can again take place at home as it did before the industrial revolution.”

A number of retailers have been moving into the consumer market for 3D printing. Staples were the first US retailer to sell 3D printers in store and earlier this month The UPS Store launched the first in-store 3D printing service in the US. In July, electronics retailer Maplin became the first UK retail chain to sell 3D printers aimed at the domestic market.

Read more about how 3D printing is changing the worlds of architecture, design, food and medicine in Print Shift, our one-off print-on-demand magazine all about additive manufacturing.

See all our coverage on MakerBot »
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Here’s the announcement from MakerBot:


The MakerBot® Experience, our in-store 3D printing demonstration at the Microsoft retail store, is expanding from its roots in Seattle, San Francisco, and Palo Alto and sweeping the nation. Get yourself to a Microsoft Retail Store near you and grab your MakerBot Replicator 2 Desktop 3D Printer.

The Microsoft retail stores are the only full line stores outside of MakerBot’s own NYC store where you can purchase a MakerBot Replicator 2 Desktop 3D Printer in person and take it home the same day.

MakerBot 3D printers to be sold in Microsoft stores

The full list of 18 Microsoft Stores that will sell MakerBot 3D printer and offer in-store demonstrations:

Scottsdale, AZ – Fashion Square
Costa Mesa, CA – South Coast Plaza
Mission Viejo, CA – The Shops at Mission Viejo
Palo Alto, CA – Stanford Shopping Center
San Diego, CA – Fashion Valley
San Francisco, CA – Westfield San Francisco Centre
Lone Tree, CO – Park Meadows Mall
Danbury, CT – Danbury Fair Mall
Atlanta, GA – Lenox Square
Oak Brook, IL – Oakbrook Center
Schaumburg, IL – Woodfield Mall
Bloomington, MN – Mall of America
Salem, NH – The Mall at Rockingham Park
Bridgewater, NJ – Bridgewater Commons
White Plains, NY – The Westchester
Houston, TX – Houston Galleria
McLean, VA – Tysons Corner Center
Bellevue, WA – Bellevue Square

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MakerBot releases 3D-print files for OUYA game console case

MakerBot lets gamers 3D-print case for OUYA console

News: Gamers will be able to design their own cases for the forthcoming Yves Behar-designed OUYA console and print them out with a MakerBot 3D printer.

The partnership will see OUYA upload 3D print files for the case to Thingiverse, the online design database operated by MakerBot, where they can be downloaded and produced with a desktop 3D printer.

The news comes two months after after mobile phone maker Nokia became the first major manufacturer to release 3D print files for its products, allowing consumers to print their own customised phone cases.

The OUYA’s case includes a lid and a spring-loaded button to house the console’s hardware, allowing users to make modifications to the standard round-edged cube designed by San Francisco designer Yves Behar.

MakerBot lets gamers 3D-print case for OUYA console

As the first product from technology start-up Boxer8, the OUYA will allow developers to make their own games and tweak the hardware as they wish.

Based on open design principles that encourage users to develop and adapt products themselves, the console will run on Google’s Android operating system and all games will either be free or available as a free trial, while the hardware itself will cost only $99.

The development of OUYA was funded through Kickstarter, with supporters pledging £5.6 million in exchange for first access to the console, making it the second-highest earning project in the crowdfunding website’s history.

Some 1,200 Kickstarter investors were given developer versions of the console at the start of the year, but it’s expected to be available to the public this June.

Last week MakerBot unveiled a prototype of a desktop scanner that will allow users to digitally scan objects they want to replicate with a 3D printer at home – see all MakerBot news and all 3D printing news.

Domus editor Joseph Grima previously told Dezeen that the birth of “the era of open design” is a timely counterpart to “the spirit of the social media era” – see all open design news and products.

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MakerBot reveals prototype desktop 3D scanner

MakerBot reveals prototype desktop 3D scanner

News: American 3D printing company MakerBot has unveiled a prototype of a desktop scanner that will allow users to digitally scan objects they want to replicate with a 3D printer at home.

Launching the MakerBot Digitizer at the SXSW technology conference in Austin, Texas, last week, the company’s CEO Bre Pettis said: “Now everyone will be able to scan a physical item, digitise it, and print it in 3D – with little or no design experience.”

The Digitizer works by using a webcam to locate the points at which two laser beams bounce off an object’s surface. The points are mapped out and turned into a plan for a 3D model, which can then be produced by a 3D printer like the desktop version sold by MakerBot.

“The MakerBot Digitizer Desktop 3D Scanner is a great tool for archiving, prototyping, replicating, and digitising prototypes, models, parts, artifacts, artwork, sculptures, clay figures, jewellery,” added Prettis. “If something gets broken, you can just scan it and print it again.”

MakerBot hopes to make the Digitizer available to consumers this autumn, but in the meantime users can register their interest on the company’s website.

Last year Prettis told Dezeen that cheap 3D printers could bring manufacturing back into the home. “Before the industrial revolution everybody did work at home; there was a cottage industry,” he said. “Now we’re bringing the factory back to the individual.”

Earlier this year we reported on a desktop machine that grinds up waste plastic to make new filament for 3D printers and news that firearms enthusiasts in the US are sharing 3D print files for illicit items like weapons, medical devices and drugs – see all news on 3D printing.

Dezeen was also at SXSW as part of Hackney House Austin, a showcase of the most exciting creative and digital companies from the London borough.

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