A typed sentence becomes a real object on your desk in under a week. No modelling skills, no slicer, no minimum. Preview is free — you only pay if you love what the machine makes.

Three steps, one afternoon of waiting for the postal service. No modelling, no slicing, no “I need to learn Blender first.”
Type a sentence or drop a reference image. Be as weird as you want — specificity makes better prints.
e.g. “A pelican reading a newspaper, 1970s brutalist style”
Our AI generates a real 3D mesh in 30–90 seconds. Spin it, inspect it, remix the prompt until it's right.
Re-rolls are free. You only pay when you approve the render.
We slice, print, and QC in the Mission, San Francisco, then hand it to the couriers. SF addresses can pick same-day — or one-hour — delivery.
Typical door-to-door: 5–7 days. Rush available.

“A slab-sided iPhone dock with a MagSafe port”
“A melting chess king in bronze”
“Octopus holding a typewriter”
“Art deco cat lamp base”
“Low-poly mountain paperweight”
“Tiny brutalist apartment block”
“A hand holding a pear”
“Geometric bonsai planter”
We print everything in a studio on Valencia St. If your address is inside the SF city limits, a bike courier can hand it to you the moment it finishes printing — usually within 60 minutes of the last layer.
Walk-ins welcome. Free coffee.
Skip the fee — grab it off the shelf.
Live tracking once dispatched.
Price is for a single object. Add painted finish, gift wrap, or SF Express at checkout. Preview and re-rolls are always free.
Desk-scale objects, pawns, trinkets.
Figurines, planters, statement gifts.
Centerpieces, display models.
Add to any order. SF Express available.
“I described a melting chess king and two days later it was on my desk. It's the best $65 I've spent this year.”
“Ordered 80 custom place-setting figurines for a wedding. They nailed the prompt and hit the deadline.”
“We use them as a sketch pad for physical ideas. Cheaper than our old prototyping house and weirdly better.”
Missing yours? Email [email protected] — a human replies within a day.
Very close. The AI preview is the actual mesh we slice and print, not a concept sketch. Surface details below 0.4 mm may round out — we tell you in the preview which parts will simplify.