3D-printed sunglasses - SDF Chatter

Well, not really sunglasses, but rather clip-on shades for my 3D-printed glasses [https://pixelfed.sdf.org/storage/m/_v2/591190770262595513/9da63c77d-bc90ba/TE8RWVZRdumq/cUmzzTHBwQB98yHht0o3F2F506WUGVPIF8ZDio5t.png]. But here’s the thing: they’re FULLY 3D-printed. The “lenses” are in fact the finest and thinnest mesh I could print with our printer - basically one 0.1mm layer of 0.4mm lines spaced 0.4mm running horizontally, and an identical layer of lines running vertically right on top of it. Is it perfect? No. The image through it is kind of “pixelated” But it’s surprisingly acceptable. It looks like this when looking through them: View through the 3D-printed mesh [https://pixelfed.sdf.org/storage/m/_v2/591190770262595513/9da63c77d-bc90ba/TE8RWVZRdumq/cUmzzTHBwQB98yHht0o3F2F506WUGVPIF8ZDio5t.png] In real-life, it’s quite a bit darker than this. But the photo shows fairly accurately how it looks like seeing through them. It works because the mesh is very close to the eyes and totally out of focus. And although it’s not optical-grade, the price is unbeatable 🙂 If you want to try printing it yourself, the model is here [https://github.com/Giraut/3D-printed_eyeglasses/raw/refs/heads/main/clip-on_shades.3mf]. It’s meant to be printed with a 0.4mm nozzle and a 0.1mm layer height - including the first one. Double-check how the slicer slices the first two layers, where the mesh lives, because it easily tends to “simplify” the lines by not printing them, which is obviously not what you want.

When 3D printed passes put patterns in your glasses, that’s a moire.
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Randall is the actual poet and scholar:

https://xkcd.com/1814/

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