Wk3: Oyster Ring Holder
This project is a collaboration between my partner Nicole and I. We were brainstorming on possible projects when Nicole suggested a ring holder. This subject supported our goal of collaborating on something that is both beautiful and functional.
After some introductory sketching helped us rough out the design concept, I imported an image of an oyster shell into Rhino for tracing. I used the bezier tool to construct a closed curve based on the image of the oyster.
Supplies
3D Printer, filament
Extrude Curve to Point
With the curve, I used ExtrudeCrvToPoint to turn the curve into a polysurface roughly shaped like a pointy shell.
Extrude Surface
I then used ExtrudeSrf to transform the surface into solid geometry suitable for printing.
Transform
At this point, I scaled the shell shape up to match my desired dimensions.
Conical Primitives
I used the cone primitive in Rhino to construct the base and the ring holder itself.
Extrude Curve (again)
For the bed of the shell, I used the original traced curve and executed a simple extrude command to transform the curve into a thin platform that rests on the main shell mesh.
Test Print Story
After going through the design flow once, I decided to do a test print of the cropped ring holder to test it with a real ring.
I'm glad that this was possible. This test print revealed that our ring holder shaft was far too large. Going back, I resized the ring holder shaft and added a small divot to make it easy to store a pearl up there.
Images From Cura
Video and image from the slicing process.
Resulting Piece
The print came out very well.
We are planning to sand out some of the roughness and paint it.