metal_0031.1
Decided the original looked too unfinished (and not raw) so I went with black. Dig the contrast.
Decided the original looked too unfinished (and not raw) so I went with black. Dig the contrast.
Three sheets of metal, a threaded rod, and a long-neglected birdbath.
Two tiny versions of the pot from metal_0031 filled with scrap in two (tiny) ways.
Inspired in equal parts by my wife's garden, Zoetica Ebb's "Alien Botany" series (collected in her exquisite CHIMERIC HERBARIUM book), Lynda Barry's scribble monsters, and my own scrap metal / 3D printing explorations (especially the daylilies I made for my wife, niece, and sister-in-law), the first of my series of imaginary scrap metal plants accompanied by my own 3D-printed vase designs. A fun experiment - and what I hope is the first of many.
20250616 :: iterated to 0031.1: painted the raw metal black
After metal_0030 killed my Creality Ender V3 and an attempt at installing a new extruder failed something miserable, I upgraded to a Creality K1 SE and I’m floored: 37 minutes from start to finish on this tiny test succulent pot. Going to try another large piece for a metal combo tomorrow so if I kill this printer, at least I won’t have had time to get too attached.
Newly-printed translucent pot has joined K's garden succulent collection. Started as part of a metalwork commission, but liked the color so much, I ended up designing another plant pot with it.
From old jack stands.