by unwohlpol
The other day a friend had a serious bike accident followed by some CT and MR scans and eventually a brain surgery. He's kind of OK now BTW.
However of course the first thing I had to ask was for his scans. Many were optimized to visualize the cerebral hemorrhage so most of them had his lower jar cut off unfortunately.
But there was this one beautiful scan which made it possible to extract the skull from it with this excellent open source software 3d slicer ( www.slicer.org ). Unfortunately I had to spend several hours in removing that radiant halo around his teeth that was ruining the whole scan. Lead fillings. You better have them removed if you're up for a clean scan!
Anyway, after that I imported the model into blender to reduce the polygon count and apply some mesh fixes (intersecting faces, flipped normals, etc). While I was polygon-deep into the model, I acknowledged the need for some extras. What a coincidence that my friend is a passionate smoker... so there you have a detachable ashtray now. Optionally you can use it as a candy bowl or whatever you folks tend to store in skulls.
Future scenarios with various skull-adapters are imaginable. From holders for pencils or toilet brushes to raspberry cases. Skulls come in a versatile shape.
PS: Yes, I have the permission to open-source his physical-intellectual property.
Printer Brand:
Wanhao
Printer:
Duplicator9
Rafts:
Doesn't Matter
Supports:
Yes
Resolution:
0,25
Infill:
20% cubic
Filament: dasfilament PLA white
Notes:
I used support (15%, zigzag, for overhangs > 75%, everywhere, in cura 3.6) which was quite hard to remove without destroying things, but it's neccessary. Also the ashtray needs support for the very flat part: concentric recommended due to it supporting the rim much better.
Pro-tip: keep a tiny amount of support on the top vertebra to make it stand on it's own. Otherwise the top joint is floating loose; I guess there's some muscular stuff missing.