![]() ![]() We decided to print a cute little pumpkin-spider, but you can easily scale the parts in Slic3r using the “S” key and print a pretty big eight-legged crawler. Plus, you can also play around with the scale. It’s built around a great idea, it’s well-designed, imaginative and easy to print! The assembly process is described on Thingiverse and it pretty much consists of gluing two parts together and then pushing the leg ball joints into the chest sockets. The model consists of seven different parts, and the creator recommends using 0.15mm layer height and a 10% infill for slicing. A simple superglue and a lack of arachnophobia is enough. New Zealand-based maker William Bruning designed this model really well – you don’t need any sort of special tools, soldering, metal parts or anything like that to assemble this pumpkin-turned-spider. Spider-Man, Spider-Man, does whatever a pumpkin can… Featured on the front page, this model perfectly demonstrates how much fun you can have with designing models for 3D printing. And for god’s sake, keep him away from your precious filaments! □ĭownload link: Zombie Jo MMU version | G-code (0.2mm, PLA, MK3 MMU2) | Zombie Jo Single Color | G-code (0.15mm, PLA, MK3) | Halloween Pumpkin Spider Transformer Just spray the printed model with a primer color, let it dry and then use acrylic colors (we have used Citadel colors) to finish the job. The shapes are quite simple, so you don’t need to spend much time with post-processing, such as sanding. We recommend using a nice green filament for the face and hands to achieve that chic zombie look.īut if you don’t have the Multi-Material Upgrade 2.0 (yet), you can still print the figure with a single filament and paint it afterward. Zombie Jo is obviously our own creation, and the model can be printed in both single-color and Multi-Material modes. ![]() It’s Prusament, of course! Delicious pink Prusament! ![]() What are they after? Brains? Nope, wrong. And at those times, when the moon is full, Zombie Jo and his army get really hungry. With Halloween two weeks away, you still have plenty of time to get everything ready for the festival of fear and fright! Do you prefer crows with glowing red eyes? Rotten arms of the living dead raising from your front lawn? An innocent-looking pumpkin with a nasty spider-surprise hiding inside? Or a zombie strikingly similar to Jo Prusa? We’ve got it all!Ī full moon hangs above the Prusa Research HQ like a… huge shiny thing in the sky. We also have our own inventions and modifications of already existing projects and much more! But let’s not limit ourselves to things found on the internet. Dress up your door with a Halloween wreath or a witch broom, or hang oversized spiders that will wow your party guests.Welcome, mortal! We hope you are not easily spooked! Why? Because we have decided to open our cabinet of curiosities and bring you some Halloween-themed inspiration! Our mysterious masters of 3D printing and post-processing ghouls selected many strange items from the place, only the brave and foolish dare to enter – The Internet! (*distant thunder*). And for the front porch or yard, you'll find our favorite DIY outdoor Halloween decorations for that all-important first impression. If you don't feel like taking on the task alone, get your little ghouls and goblins involved in the handiwork-there are plenty of simple Halloween crafts for kids here too. Or, use what you have in your house as inspiration: Create transferware pumpkins to arrange alongside your collection in the china cabinet or paint pumpkins with shiny copper paint to display in the kitchen. And if you're short on time, you can pull together many of these last-minute.įill up every room with wickedly creative Halloween DIY crafts ranging from ghostly Mason jar ideas to larger, more challenging projects like wall hangings. These creative ideas ensure that every inch of your house looks unique and festive this season-not to mention just the right amount of scary! Bonus: Many of these cheap and easy Halloween decorations are pumpkin-themed and seasonal enough to keep around through Thanksgiving. Why? Because you've got the best DIY Halloween decorations in town! From the spooky front door décor to the cobweb-wrapped dining room where you've laid out a spread of savory and sweet Halloween treats, your house and decor will be the talk of the neighborhood this year.
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