For those who want expensive, low-foam, tedious, soap bars.
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For those who want expensive, low-foam, tedious, soap bars.



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For those who want expensive, low-foam, tedious, soap bars.



@wdormann How does this not just end up hanging from the shower head?
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For those who want expensive, low-foam, tedious, soap bars.



@wdormann Also...
Why show it printed into a regular bar of soap? Make it something fun, like a benchy
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R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic
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For those who want expensive, low-foam, tedious, soap bars.



We all know that 3D printing a thing is not a convenient way of getting a commodity thing you can probably walk up the street to get. But what's funny about this product is before you use it, you have to dry it for at least 24 hours at 155F before you even print with it.
Even more chuckle worthy is if you look for reviews of people using this, they all use the default infill setting for plastic filament. Meaning you end up with a hollow soap-like product.
Seriously, who is this product for?

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We all know that 3D printing a thing is not a convenient way of getting a commodity thing you can probably walk up the street to get. But what's funny about this product is before you use it, you have to dry it for at least 24 hours at 155F before you even print with it.
Even more chuckle worthy is if you look for reviews of people using this, they all use the default infill setting for plastic filament. Meaning you end up with a hollow soap-like product.
Seriously, who is this product for?

@wdormann I know *precisely* who this product is for.
People who have bulk plastic bags, a heat sealer, and a label printer.
Trick candy shaped soap.
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We all know that 3D printing a thing is not a convenient way of getting a commodity thing you can probably walk up the street to get. But what's funny about this product is before you use it, you have to dry it for at least 24 hours at 155F before you even print with it.
Even more chuckle worthy is if you look for reviews of people using this, they all use the default infill setting for plastic filament. Meaning you end up with a hollow soap-like product.
Seriously, who is this product for?

@wdormann I can’t say it wouldn’t be fun to play with once… I can’t envision it being fun much more than once.
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We all know that 3D printing a thing is not a convenient way of getting a commodity thing you can probably walk up the street to get. But what's funny about this product is before you use it, you have to dry it for at least 24 hours at 155F before you even print with it.
Even more chuckle worthy is if you look for reviews of people using this, they all use the default infill setting for plastic filament. Meaning you end up with a hollow soap-like product.
Seriously, who is this product for?

@wdormann soap prototypers

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We all know that 3D printing a thing is not a convenient way of getting a commodity thing you can probably walk up the street to get. But what's funny about this product is before you use it, you have to dry it for at least 24 hours at 155F before you even print with it.
Even more chuckle worthy is if you look for reviews of people using this, they all use the default infill setting for plastic filament. Meaning you end up with a hollow soap-like product.
Seriously, who is this product for?

@wdormann I am imagining novelty shops that want to sell parents a cheap toy for their kids that doesn't get thrown away?
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@wdormann soap prototypers

@ferrix
"soap"
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We all know that 3D printing a thing is not a convenient way of getting a commodity thing you can probably walk up the street to get. But what's funny about this product is before you use it, you have to dry it for at least 24 hours at 155F before you even print with it.
Even more chuckle worthy is if you look for reviews of people using this, they all use the default infill setting for plastic filament. Meaning you end up with a hollow soap-like product.
Seriously, who is this product for?
@wdormann This must be another income source for Paper Street Soap Co's anarchist side-projects!