Looking for a way to kick some surfaces into high gear? Then check out these patterned paint rollers that take hand painting up a notch. The way they work is by integrating a traditional paint roller with a cylinder covered in raised and repeating shapes. The roller is filled with paint and the cylinder picks the paint up as it rolls past.
Et voila – tres chic!
In an interview with 3DPrint.com, Kok explained his creative inspiration for this project:
“I’m always looking for new ideas to combine with 3D print. Next to product design, I’m very inspired by architecture, photography, and graphic design. For this collection, I was looking for a 3D printable DIY project. Modern geometric patterns are a big trend now, especially in interior design. So, all of this started to fall in place and I started with the idea of DIY pattern painting, stencils, and patterned rollers.”
“For this project, I think I designed and modeled around 20 different rollers,” Kok explained. “I made the final selection based on the widest variety I could create. While these four are different from each other, they are very sophisticated as a set. With these kinds of designs, I hope to inspire others to design and customize their own rollers and I am having so much fun with the project that I plan on making additional rollers in the near future.”
What has allowed Kok to make that change is access to 3D modeling software, such as Solidworks and 3DS Max, and 3D printing, something that allows him to create quickly and with minimal financial investment. It doesn’t hurt that he is a product design student and a freelance designer at 3D Systems and has access to a bevy of 3D Systems’ machines. Keeping in mind, however, that not everybody has that luxury and since he is aiming at the consumer market, he designed these rollers to print on the Cube 3 and the Cube Pro.
“I tested the product myself and made corrections and adjustments until I had a perfectly working 3D printed product. I prefer to print at a high quality, especially for 3D printed objects that are reusable and definitely worth the wait. A roller in 70 microns takes about eight hours to print, so if you started the print before you went to school or work, you could start your painting job at the end of the day,” he told us.
I can already think of a dozen interesting projects that could be created with these rollers and hopefully they will someday lead to the end of the horrible sponge painting epidemic that seemed to plague so many walls in homes across America. By varying the type of paint that is used – e.g., chalkboard, textile, metallic, magnetic – the number of project possibilities expands even further.
Is a patterned wall in your future? Let us know if you’ll be printing your own painting apparatus in the 3D Printed Patterned Paint Rollers forum thread over at 3DPB.com. We’d love to see your results!