Most 3D-printed objects aren't exactly cuddly. They tend to be made of hard plastic. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University, however, can print model horses with braidable tails, troll heads with brushable hair and wizards with long, lush beards. The concept for 3D-printing hair was inspired by those tiny strands you get when you pull a hot-glue gun away from a gob of melted plastic. The same idea works for the plastic used by a 3D printer. "You just squirt a little bit of material and pull away," said Gierad Laput, a Ph.D. student in Carnegie Mellon's Human-Computer Interaction Institute. Laput and his colleagues refer to this as "furbrication." Printing hair "requires no special hardware, just a set of parameters that can be added to a 3D-print job," Carnegie Mellon notes. The printer used for the experiments cost just $300 (about £196. AU$423). Each strand of hair is made by instructing the printer to create a tiny blob of molten plastic and then pull the print head and print bed off to the side, drawing the plastic out into a thin filament. http://www.cnet.com/news/3d-printed-hair-puts-a-coiffure-on-your-plastic-creations/ |