How to 3D Print Onto Fabric

67K25630

Intro: How to 3D Print Onto Fabric

You can combine 3D printed designs with fabric to create exciting new textiles. It's a really interesting process that has a lot of possibilities still to be discovered. In this Instructable, I will show you how to print on three different kinds of fabric: power mesh, heat-sealable nylon, and cotton/poly broadcloth. 3D prints on power-mesh can be seen in contemporary projects. The heat-sealable and woven cotton/poly is what I chose to experiment with, I particularly wanted to figure out how to print on a woven fabric. Some things didn't work but some worked beautifully. I show you what did and go over some of what did not.

The printer I use is a MakerBot Replicator 2 with TPU (flexible) filament from Sainsmart. PLA can be used for all of these techniques except I found that it did not stick to the heat-sealable fabric I used. I encourage you to try it out on other heat-sealable fabrics and report back. :)

It's a technique that has been explored all over the world and has been discussed and experimented with for longer than you may think. There is still much to be explored so follow along and get hooked!

STEP 1: Choose Fabric

Here is what I have found to be true - in order for the 3D filament to stay on fabric it either needs to be perforated or be coated with a hot-melt polymer (although not all coatings work with all filament).

Netting and Meshes

The perforated fabric can be a mesh or netting. The fabric is placed in between layers of printed filament making contact and bonding with itself through the holes in the netting or perforation. The fabric then gets locked in and your print stays on the fabric. In this Instructable I use power mesh. I link to other fabrics that will also work, some may take some experimentation.

Power mesh

Cargo netting

Tulle

Lace

Heat Sealable

Heat-sealable fabrics are coated with a polymer that bonds to itself when heated up. This is for creating clothing and soft goods without the used of a sewing machine. It's especially good for items that need to be air or water tight. Since the fabric has a hot-melt polymer coating on it the hot filament heats up the coating and bonds with it when printed on top of it. In this Instructable, I use Seattle fabric's 30 denier heat-sealable coated nylon. They have other heat sealable fabrics that may work.

Heat sealable nylon

Woven Poly Blend

The only way I have been able to get a print to stay on a fabric that is not a mesh or that has a coating is to create holes with a laser cutter. This is best done with a poly blend so as the laser cuts it seals the edges, preventing the newly created mesh from fraying over time. In this Instructable, I use a cotton/poly broadcloth.

Cotton/Poly broadcloth

STEP 2: Choose Filament

TPU is used in this Instructable but PLA, ABS, and NinjaFlex have also worked well except PLA doesn't work with the heat-sealable fabric I used. TPU is a nice flexible filament in contrast to a hard PLA. TPU is used for the snap design I include. The flexibility of the TPU is needed so the socket half can flex to allow the stud to snugly fit. I believe the design can work with PLA if the tension allowance is adjusted or the walls are thinned out to allow for flexing. The .step files are included in under Materials in case you want to modify the design.

SainSmart 1.75 mm TPU

MakerBot PLA

STEP 3: Gather Materials

Attached is a snap design for you to use throughout the instructable. Alternatively, you can follow along with your own design. Included in the download are the printable .stl files, .step files if you would like to modify the designs and .x3g files if you would like to go straight to printing on the MakerBot. When you download the file and open it up you will see there are two endings on each half of the snap design: Snap3 and Snap3C. The design is made of three snaps spaced one inch apart and the "C" means coaster which is the design for the laser-cut woven Cotton/Poly fabric, I explain why later on. The illustrator (.ai) file is the cut file for the laser.

Materials

  • TPU, PLA or another filament
  • Mesh, netting, broadcloth or heat sealable fabric
  • blue tape
  • scissors
  • ruler
  • laser cutter (if using broadcloth)
  • desktop 3D printer (MakerBot's Replicator 2 is used in this Instructable)

STEP 4: Settings and Export

Open a design in the MakerBot software and plug in the settings below depending on the filament you are using. Everything is a default setting unless mentioned below.

TPU

  • Infill: 75%
  • Temp: 220 ºC
  • Speed while extruding: 80 mm/s

If using PLA, ABS or MakerBot's flexible filament you can choose MakerBot's default settings.

Export the design file and put it on an SD card or connect your computer to the MakerBot via USB.

STEP 5: Cut Fabric

Cut a piece of fabric that is a little smaller than the printable area. The MakerBot Replicator 2 has a printable area of 9.7” L x 6” W. I cut my swatches to the dimensions of 4.5" x 6".

STEP 6: Laser Cut (Woven)

To create a mesh I cut holes with a 1.5mm diameter placed 1.5mm apart. The snap design for the woven fabric gets a raft at its base in order for it to properly bond to itself. The small diameter of each snap did not stick with various laser designs I tested which you can see below. The successful design is on the far left which was the only one that was able to hold onto the fabric. When creating the perforated design make it span the whole footprint of your 3D print design. If working with small diameters you too may need to create a thin raft for the design to sit on.

For a 120-watt laser cutter use these settings to cut your perforated design:

  • Speed: 90
  • Power: 15
  • Frequency: 500

STEP 7: Print and Sleep

Fire up the printer and get your design onto the printer either by using an SD card or connecting your computer to the printer via USB cable. Grab your fabric swatch and blue tape and keep them close by. You will need them shortly after the print starts. The trick is to pause the print and put the fabric on top and resume the print.

Start the printing process and watch closely. A soon as your design starts printing navigate to the Sleep(Cold Pause) option in the MakerBot menu and be poised and ready to select. Wait until the print is on its 2nd layer or about 1 - 2 millimeters thick the hit the M button to Sleep.

Sleeping the snap with coaster design.

STEP 8: Place Fabric

Place your fabric on top of the print. If placing a laser cut woven, center the print base with the laser cut holes.

For a stretchy mesh, like the power mesh, tape one side down then slightly stretch the fabric while you tape down the opposite side. Repeat and stretch it in the other direction to make the fabric slightly taut. Once you start printing this may take some experimenting with to get right.

STEP 9: Finish Print

When the fabric is in place choose to Resume Build. Be ready to tweak the platform distance from the nozzle by twisting the three knobs under the platform a quarter turn at a time to lower it. Whether you need to and how far will depend on the thickness of the fabric you are using. You will get a feel for this as you do it more. I usually do a quarter turn or less with the power mesh if I feel like the filament looks like it doesn't have much room to extrude properly.

Allow the print to finish. If using the snap design repeat the printing process for both sides. When finished, remove the tape and print. You may need a sharp spatula or paint scraper to free up the bottoms of the print.

STEP 10: Finished!

If you used the snap designs you now have your very own snap fabric!

STEP 11: Printing on Heat-Sealable Fabric

Printing on heat-sealable fabric is even easier than printing on a perforated fabric. This is because the step of printing before laying the fabric down is not necessary. The filament bonds to the polymer coating on the fabric. The TPU bonded beautifully and created a very strong connection. However, when I used PLA it did not bond with the polymer well enough to use in the future.

Tape down the fabric onto the platform and adjust the height of the platform a smidge to compensate for the thickness. Load your print and hit go! The print stays really well on the 30 denier nylon I link to in this 'ible from Seattle fabrics.

STEP 12: Experiment!

This technique has the potential to make beautiful and practical pieces. I'm certainly still exploring and I hope it sparks your creativity too! What will you make?

26 Comments

Stupid question here (new at the 3D printing thing) - what is the blue material on your plate? Not the tape, but you have a blue base of some sort? And do you ever have a problem with certain fabrics sticking or melting to the plate?
I'm the original author, I posted yesterday and I can't find it. I'm not used to blogging? Is that what this is lol,? 59yrs old, tech ignorant! At any rate, once all you smart azzes stop laughing, he he he, has anyone come up with an answer? Maybe I'll just cut up a pair if stretch jeans, but they're so darn expensive, lol.
Original poster:
Hi, I just researched "blue denim motorcycle helmets". They're rare, but I found a few (pics). Actually I'm just looking for a shell to put on a helmet, of blue denim, which they don't sell. Saw 1 picture of a 3D of blue denim on a helmet. I'm 59, disabled and basically broke. I'm just looking for an inexpensive way to have a 3D of blue denim that I could stretch around & stick on my old helmets? I'm ignorant to all printing except offset as I was a printer for 25 yrs. Can you help?

amazing creativity push-reset! Thanks for sharing.

May I know if you or everyone using 3D prnter of their own? Or its the school or something? I am having a hard time finding one to use in Tokyo.

Nice Job, taking 3D printing to another world.

I am also working on project where we can print 3D patterns on various fabrics. I have successfully printer directly on to fabrics without heated bed or printing first layer then laying fabric and then printing again.

Trick i am using is to push melted filament through fabric, to do this make a rectangle or square frame stretch and clip fabric on to the frame. Fabric must be flat with equal tension on entire surface. Use this frame as printing platform.

Z-Axis home should be be 1-2 mm lower than fabric layer.

Enjoy printing. If need more help contact me on cstpatel at gmail dot com

That's a great technique. Thanks for sharing. My goal is to print onto a solid woven and natural fiber material, so this is very thought provoking. I've noticed that when I print the 2nd layer on top of the base and fabric that raising the z-axis less that the actual thickness of the two combined is best. That way it pushes through the fabric nicely to meet the bottom layer.
It's interesting that you are doing it only with fabric. I will surely email you with more questions! Thanks again for sharing!

Hi @push_reset,

So nice to see someone else experimenting with printing on fabric! I have also been experimenting with it for some time. Check out my instagram instagram.com/karineggertrosenqvist or my website www.karineggert.dk, where I have written about my journey with 3D printing. I would be happy to exchange any ideas and experiences :-)

This is amazing.

So, rather than tape, a bar that has a curl (to grab the print bed) on one end.

On the other end of the bar a connector which clamps down into something (next part) in a scissor like action.

The other part is just like the first end of the bar. It clamps over the other side of the print bed. (excess fabric would go between the print bed and this part) A snap connector accepts the bar.

Several of these bars could be used to hold fabrics.

Additionally, half tubes (troughs) could be added to hold the excess fabric.

I also assume this entire structure could be built on top of any print bed since height in the printer isn't needed too much.

Is this useless? The Fabric frame that fits on a makerbot print bed. (The troughs could even be made to hold "circular bolts" of cloth)

Excellent work... Someone needs to ship to you 2 great mechanical engineers and all their tools. Then tell them to take every idea and expand on it...

So, Now we need to:

1) Have frames made to attach fabric to the beds,

2) Have software tools to convert clothing pattern guide paper to stl (or suitable format),

3) Have a complete set of "here is how you handle this seam/sewing technique."

Then, it would be like quilting your clothing. Segments of fabrics could be bonded to bed (magnet frame) and print seams. Maybe even print the "cut here" lines.

Do you have a completed wearable item? Or is this for fastening fabrics (buttons...)

I see ways of making the bed so fabric can lay on both sides (the rest of the clothing.) A bed might be a tin can rather than flat.

It would be amazing to see an actual zipper printed in situ.... Hmmm. (I have several printers... I've also sewn pants, shirts with a sewing machine.)

Nicely done! So very glad to see others exploring this sort of thing. Don't stop!

Hi!! Do you have any online photos of your experiments or work? I looked you up awhile ago to see if you had any info after hearing you had experimented with 3D printing onto fabric. I would love to link to your work if you have some online to show people other examples. :)
Alas, not much beyond the odd "teaser" photo and the examples I had at Maker Faire NYC 2012 & 2013.

Life threw some monkey-wrenches and I had to re-prioritize a lot of things. Perhaps this summer I'll have a chance to get something more formal documented. I have to burn off a bunch of accumulated vacation time - use it or lose it! ;-)

Awesome 3D Printer Innovation! Do you think it would be possible to print on leather? What filament might you try in the future? Wood? Metal?

I wondered too! You should try it! I see three things that you can try.

1) There is perforated leather that may work with designs that are large enough to span over lots of holes.

2) You can try coating the part you want to print on with a hot-melt adhesive or polymer (be careful not to damage the leather with an iron).

3) Try laser cutting one hole (instead of many little ones) to work with the snap design that has a smaller diameter... the problem with the woven is that it frayed which leather does not.

oh man, this opens up a lot of ideas... thanks for sharing, really really good job

More Comments