

The head imported into Meshmixer with a plane-cut neck, ready for 3D printing. Do a plane cut such that you have a flat surface on one side of the model (for 3D printing).Scale the object (usually also possible in slicer software).

Here’s a workflow that works pretty well:

Let’s say you want to sculpt something from scratch and 3D print it. Luckily, Meshmixer have both of these features! Meshmixer and Sculptris can luckily “communicate” through the OBJ file format, which results in a powerful Sculptris/Meshmixer combo.
#Sculptris 3d model for print full#
If we were to add two features in Sculptris it would’ve been full STL support (both import and export) as well as plane cut. Sculptris + Meshmixer = 3D Printing Dynamite (sometimes…)
#Sculptris 3d model for print software#
The best way to think about this software is that you have a single lump of clay and use your fingers to sculpt what you want from that.Ĭompared to Meshmixer it lacks quite a few tools, but it does what it does better than Meshmixer in our opinion. One thing that Sculptris doesn’t do too well is to handle several objects at a time. Sculptris also has pretty powerful texturing tools, but these are a bit less relevant to us compared to the core sculpting features. All the brush tools has size and strength parameters, as well as several individual settings. You also have a symmetry mode which is ideal when modelling heads and characters. In addition to these, you have a masking tool which lets you protect certain areas of your model from being altered as well as reduction tools that reduces the amount of triangles in different ways. There are nine different sculpting tools where “grab” and “smooth” are two tools you’ll manage to do a lot with. A set of hotkeys and combinations with mouse buttons and wheel increases the work speed drastically. The UI is also very clear and easy to get into. Even its big brother ZBrush doesn’t have this feature. This is partly due to the so called dynamic tessellation, which raises the triangle resolution on the fly when needed to preserve details. The sculpting in Sculptris however, is in our opinion much more smooth and easy to use when jumping straight in without any prior knowledge. Sculptris has some similarities to Meshmixer (which we’ve talked about several times before on our blog) when it comes to sculpting. A quickly sculpted creepy head in Sculptris. We haven’t looked at Sculptris before, so let’s give you our first impressions before going into the 3D printing aspects. Unlike ZBrush however, Sculptris is completely free! Sculptris is a sculpting 3D modelling software developed by Pixelogic who also have developed the more famous ZBrush.
