Hats off to Redditor SoftwareDeveloperTim for putting together 3Dprintedsound.com, a nifty little website that transmogrifies your sound data into a 3D printable STL.
Whether you’re immortalizing the sound of a loved one or stealthily swearing at your co-workers — there’s a staggering number of ways to pitch it. Handily you can render the model as flat for wall-stickability, or as free-standing radial sculptures that, frankly, look fantastic.
The project is open source, meaning those with the inclination can dig around GitHub and tinker at their leisure. For the rest of us, it’s a great timekiller. We give it a week before the All3DP office is awash with 3D printed Wilhelm screams and Endgame quotes.
Check it out — 3Dprintedsound.com
You’re reading Stuff, All3DP’s new regular post covering the surprising, cool and outright useful things we encounter week in week out. Not always directly relating to 3D printing, although most often it is, think of Stuff as our watercooler moment, telling you about this one cool thing we found that we just have to share.
Some product links that feature here are affiliate links, through which All3DP receives a small commission. All3DP is an editorially independent publication. Reviews and other editorial pieces are strictly unbiased and can not be bought or ordered. If a product appears here, it’s because we think it’s cool. For more details, please check out our Terms of Use.
License: The text of " Making Audio Visual with 3DPrintedSound.com" by All3DP is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.