We’ve been reporting on the progress of the Cooper Hewitt as they worked toward their reopening date after three years, using a great deal of 3D design and 3D printing technology via 3D Systems.
Using a Sense 3D scanner, the designers created a basic shape from which to work, carving out an elegant scissors shape featuring an intricate lace detail. The design was made to be fully functional. 3D printed on a ProJet 6000 SLA printer, the team created the scissor pieces to be sanded, nickel-plated, and polished to a mirror-like sheen before they were put together for a perfect fit and sharpened and ready to meet the celebratory ribbon.
In taking the project and events full circle, the scissors were printed on the same type of printer that is being exhibited in the Cooper Hewitt Process Lab sponsored by 3DS.
With programs, workshops, and festivities abounding, the reopening has truly celebrated all the hard work that so many teams put into revamping the only museum in the nation devoted exclusively to historic and contemporary design. In a whirl of new exhibits and activities for visitors, the Cooper Hewitt has been showing off in a very high-tech way in multiple collaborations with 3D Systems that deliver impact to the public, introducing them to the basics of 3D printing technology as well as showing how it has the potential to change the world in so many ways, from offering 3D printed prosthetics to 3D printed robotics helping paraplegics learn how to get out of a wheelchair and actually walk again.
The 3D printed scissors were a focal point of attention, and now are the topic of conversation regarding a place for them in the museum’s official collection.
Have you ever been to the Cooper Hewitt Museum? What do you think of the combination of art and technology? Share your thoughts with us in the Cooper Hewitt 3D Printed Scissors forum over at 3DPB.com.