Working with Wands

The End of 3D Printers

Did the title of the post get your attention? I refer to the “The End” text that a student 3D printed yesterday using a 3Doodler handheld 3D printer. That and other prints — especially bubble wands — are below.

Colorful Wands, and Messy

Cute!

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Blow a Double Bubble!

Bubbles Bubbles Bubbles

Blowing bubbles is harder than it looks!

Silver Medal for Number of Wands

A student made seven wands during one 45-minute class. Almost a world record!

 

New Wand Record!

This student created eight wands during one 45-minute class. That must be a new record.

3D Shapes with 3D Printer

The students made 3-dimensional wands –  based on cubes — using the 3Doodler handheld printing pens.

Now we all know that cubes have six sides, each side being a square. To make a cube, you may think that we would need to make six squares, and use the plastic filament to attach the sides to each other at 90 degree angles. We learned a short cut that only used four squares! Can you figure out why it works? (Imagine a hollow cube).

When the students blew into the wands in one side, the air escaped from any of the five different sides, and the bubbles went off in all different directions! Also, the inside of the wand made very unusual bubble shapes!

Learning to Design with 3Doodler Pens

These young students practiced tracing shapes with their 3Doodler Start printing pens.

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