HONG KONG, Feb. 2, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- More than 190 students from 13 local secondary schools will take part in a year-long programme to gain hands-on experience in preparing an extremely rare whale specimen for public exhibitions scheduled for 2027. The Environment and Conservation Fund "Sea" Through Cetacean: STEAM Student Ambassador Programme & Cetacean Conservation Exhibition, organised by the Division of Science of Lingnan University in collaboration with The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Cetacea Research Institute, and Ocean Park Conservation Foundation Hong Kong, was officially launched on 1 February 2026. This initiative builds on the rare stranding of a Longman's beaked whale in Hong Kong in 2024, providing students with a unique opportunity to assist in the preparation of skeletal specimens of one of the world's most mysterious marine mammal species. The project also promotes cetacean conservation and will educate the public in key marine environmental issues, including plastic pollution in the oceans.
Dr Eric Cheng Kam-chung, SBS, MH, OStJ, JP Chairman of the Environment and Conservation Fund Committee, delivered a speech at the launch ceremony: "This Environment and Conservation Fund funded project turns a marine ecological conservation event into a highly meaningful educational programme. It is believed that the project will not only raise public awareness of whale and dolphin conservation as well as environmental sustainability but also encourage a deeper reflection on marine ecological conservation."
Dr Chu Chun-wa, Assistant Director (Fisheries and Marine Conservation) of the Fisheries and Marine Conservation Branch of the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD), said "The AFCD has long been committed to promoting marine conservation. We believe this skeletal preparation programme will cultivate a sense of responsibility among young people towards marine ecology, foster greater interest in fisheries and marine conservation, transform scientific knowledge into action, and facilitate the long-term protection of biodiversity in Hong Kong waters.
Prof Paulina Wong Pui-yun, Head and Associate Professor (Presidential Early Career Scholar) of Division of Science at Lingnan University, agreed "Complete Longman's beaked whale specimens are extremely rare worldwide, and this has presented a precious opportunity to study rare deep-sea cetaceans. Lingnan University is honoured to host this programme, which allows students to study whale specimens through STEAM interdisciplinary experiences. We hope to teach students to understand marine conservation from multiple perspectives — science, technology, engineering, and arts — so they can become a new generation of ambassadors, spreading conservation messages among the public and raising awareness of the importance of protecting marine ecosystems."
This two-year project, led by Prof Scott Chui Yik-suen, Research Assistant Professor of the Division of Science at Lingnan University, starts with providing introductory training and guidelines on the preparation of whale skeleton specimens to over 190 students from 13 secondary schools across Hong Kong. Students will assist with an 11-month specimen processing procedure and gain hands-on experience in handling, degreasing, measuring, and documenting the condition of the assigned whale skeletal specimens to preserve them for both scientific study and public exhibition. Throughout the process, they will regularly and systematically monitor and record any changes to the specimens, and will also participate in diverse STEAM-based experiential learning activities, including science and conservation lectures, visits to research facilities and marine animal rescue centres, and field trips to Tai O, as well as creating works of art to exhibit. These multidisciplinary skills will help them become ambassadors advocating for cetacean and marine conservation.
In the second phase, the project will extend its reach to the public through two Cetacean Conservation Exhibitions scheduled for the second and fourth quarters of 2027. These will showcase the Longman's beaked whale skeleton prepared with the students' assistance in the first phase, together with specimens of two local cetacean species—the Chinese white dolphin and the finless porpoise. The exhibitions will also display the canvas bag found in the whale's stomach to highlight the threats of plastic pollution to marine ecosystems. During the exhibitions, student ambassadors will serve as docents, guiding public tours and describing their own experiences to deliver key messages about cetacean ecology and marine conservation. The digital 3D model and 1:1 3D-printed replica of the Longman's beaked whale skeleton will serve as lasting educational and scientific resources, contributing to 3DTEACH—a newly established educational alliance among universities in Hong Kong. This initiative will create ongoing and lasting value to public education, conservation efforts, and the scientific community.
Prof Chui said "There are typically 20 to 50 cases of dolphin stranding reported in Hong Kong each year, predominantly involving two local cetacean species—Chinese white dolphins and finless porpoises. Strandings of other species are rarer, with only a few reported annually. Cetaceans inhabiting inshore habitats, such as Chinese white dolphins and finless porpoises, are particularly susceptible to threats from human activities, including coastal development, marine traffic, and pollution. Plastic debris and fishing hooks are sometimes found in the stomachs of stranded animals, and entanglement in abandoned fishing nets and gear is not uncommon. One study even found up to 145 microplastic particles in the stomach of a stranded Chinese white dolphin in the Pearl River Estuary, highlighting the critical issue of plastic pollution in the marine ecosystem. We hope to educate the public in environmental issues such as cetacean conservation and marine plastic pollution through this project."
Participating Secondary Schools (in alphabetical order):
Diocesan Boys' School
DMHC Siu Ming Catholic Secondary School
Elegantia College
HKCCCU Logos Academy
Kau Yan College
La Salle College
Lingnan Hang Yee Memorial Secondary School
Po Leung Kuk Laws Foundation College
St. Catharine's School for Girls
Sha Tin Methodist College
Shun Tak Fraternal Association Leung Kau Kui College
The ELCHK Yuen Long Lutheran Secondary School
Ying Wa College
About the Longman's beaked whale
The Longman's beaked whales (Indopacetus pacificus), also known as Indo-Pacific beaked whales or tropical bottlenose whales, belong to the beaked whale family (Ziphiidae) within the order Cetacea. They live in the deep, open, tropic waters of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, and are rarely seen near coastal waters. As of 2021, there have only been seven other complete skeleton specimens of Longman's beaked whales reported worldwide, and they are widely regarded as one of the most mysterious and least understood marine mammals.
** The press release content is from PR Newswire. Bastille Post is not involved in its creation. **
Lingnan University and partners launch Cetaceans STEAM conservation programme where over 190 secondary students participate in preparing a rare Longman's beaked whale skeleton
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AUGSBURG, Germany, May 30, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- MakerWorld's first user-initiated charity design contest has completed: winners have now been selected from 2,056 models submitted by 1,008 creators worldwide. Created in support of the Pieksekisten project, the contest drew more than 250,000 unique visitors and is helping turn digital designs, platform points, and community goodwill into 3D-printed gifts for children in cancer wards.
From a Personal Journey to a Shared Mission
Pieksekisten, literally "comfort boxes" in German, are small boxes filled with gifts for children who have just undergone treatment, examinations, or stressful hospital appointments. They are not grand presents, but they can offer something kind in a difficult moment. After a shot or a blood draw, a small object a child gets to choose for themselves can mean everything.
The project began in February 2023, in the day clinic of the Augsburg Pediatric Oncology Center, where Pascal Neumann's son Thore was being treated for Grade IV medulloblastoma, an aggressive pediatric brain tumor. Pascal's partner Silke began asking how small positive moments could be created for children on the ward, after a defining instance one day: a song played on the radio after Thore's MRI examination, and it became achingly clear how exhausting clinical routine truly is for young children, not only medically, but emotionally.
The first Pieksekisten arrived at the clinic in March 2023, filled with classic small gifts. 3D printing was added later, when Pascal noticed something his son did with the rough early prints from his beginner-level 3D printer:
"For me, it was a failed print. For him, it was something his father had made for him. He was happy about things I myself would have thrown away long before."
Thore passed away in October 2023, at just five years old.
The project is carried today by Pascal and Silke together, with a clear division of work: Silke coordinates with the hospital ward, including appointments, on-site handovers, direct communication with clinical staff, and Instagram documentation, while Pascal handles the technical infrastructure, including the website, MakerWorld and Bambu Lab communications, model curation, and printing. Early on, the pediatric clinic acknowledged the project in an official letter of thanks, explicitly recognizing the real-world effect of these small positive moments on children during difficult treatments. The hospital and pediatric oncology context is included here as the personal and real-world background that inspired and shaped the project, not as a statement of formal institutional hospital involvement or official partnership.
As word spread through the MakerWorld community, a platform where 2 million users share, remix, and download models daily, designers began spontaneously contributing models. Even before any formal contest, Pascal had documented permissions from more than 50 designers, secured one by one through forum messages and direct conversations. The growing enthusiasm caught the attention of the MakerWorld team, who reached out to Pascal to formalize what was already happening organically.
"MakerWorld was the first place where all of this came together: people already designing exactly the right kinds of things, an active printing community, real practical feasibility, and a platform where an idea could very quickly become something tangible and useful." — Pascal
Why Not Just Mail Toys? — A Controlled Pipeline of Goodwill
Every model that enters a Pieksekiste begins as a file on a creator's workstation, often on the other side of the world. A designer uploads a file to MakerWorld. Pascal clicks download. Seconds later, the file is on his printer, building layer by layer. It's like sending a fax, but what's transmitted isn't text; it's warmth you can hold in your hand.
International shipping of a physical toy typically costs $20–50 per parcel and takes 2–6 weeks, plus customs forms. The same care, sent as a file and printed locally? Within a day. Less than a dollar. Nearly zero carbon footprint.
On MakerWorld, models are designed to work seamlessly with Bambu Lab printers, and many come with ready-to-use print profiles. Pascal currently runs three Bambu Lab P1S Combo systems, identical units expanded over time for reliability, achieving a 98% usable production rate in daily operation.
These are not items pulled from a warehouse shelf. As Pascal puts it, they are consciously made, with time, attention, and the thought of giving one child a small positive moment. What children pick first on the ward, what gets handled most often, and what staff see working in practice feeds directly back into the next round of model selection, creating a closed loop between bedside reality and production planning.
And the designs themselves remain freely available. Anyone can download and print their own version, imagining it now in the hands of another child fighting their own battle somewhere in the world.
But controlled goodwill is not only about logistics. It is also about how a gift reaches a child. The Pieksekisten are not open toy boxes. They are placed at specific points within the treatment workflow — the finger-prick room and examination rooms 3 and 5 — and used only under nurse supervision. After a procedure, a child chooses one small object for themselves, with staff present.
"The boxes are a deliberately placed and controlled point of handover within everyday clinical life," Pascal explains. "Not an open toy offering."
This level of control is medical, not organizational. Many of the children on the ward are severely immunocompromised. For now, Pascal accepts no externally printed finished pieces, only digital files transformed into physical objects through his own equipment, on PLA filament, with every print visually inspected before it leaves his hands.
"As soon as material quality, production quality, or safety can no longer be reliably verified, the sustainability of the project itself would immediately be at risk."
A Charity Contest That Broke New Ground
On April 2, 2026, MakerWorld launched the Pieksekisten Design Contest, the platform's first charity contest, co-developed by a community member in partnership with MakerWorld. While the contest page was formally "Hosted By U: @JamesDaRock," the initiative grew from a true meeting of minds: designers had already been contributing for weeks, and the MakerWorld team built the contest framework together with Pascal to give that goodwill a proper home.
Within three weeks, 1,008 creators submitted 2,056 distinct models, with the contest page drawing more than 250,000 unique visitors. Before the contest, the project had run on permissions from roughly 50 designers, gathered one by one over many months through Bambu Lab forum messages and direct conversations. In three weeks, that creative pool expanded roughly 40-fold. Today, about half of the documented production batches in active circulation already trace back to contest submissions.
Each submission was reviewed by Pascal for safety, child-appropriateness, and print reliability. Throughout, he applied the same standard he had used from day one: no model enters a Pieksekiste without clear, documented permission from its designer.
"A model is not just a file. It is the time, experience, and creative work of a person — and that is exactly how it should be treated."
"Just because you can print something does not automatically mean you should simply take it."
Winners Announced
The top three winning designs reflect the practical and emotional range of the brief:
- 1st Place: Wall Decor & IV Stand Clip Pieksekisten x Art Zig by @La Forge d'Orion
- 2nd Place: Puppet Theater with Puppets and Scenery by @berri3D
- 3rd Place: Brain Teaser Puzzle Board | 48 Challenges | 5 Levels by @PrecisionCrafts
The Community Favorite award went to Pieksi – A friend from a syringe @DIY Wizard.
The Kids Choice selection is still underway. Finalists will be introduced to children in the ward, and the designs that spark the greatest smiles will be announced publicly on the MakerWorld contest page once the children's voting process is complete.
"Every model submitted carried someone's time, care, and imagination, and many of them will continue to be reviewed, printed, and tested in the real everyday life of the ward. To everyone who contributed: thank you for helping us create more of those moments."
— Pascal Neumann
Points Donation — Converting Earned Credit into Bedside Gifts
Throughout the competition, participants repeatedly asked whether they could help beyond submitting models. The community itself surfaced the answer: could there be a way to donate points directly to support Pascal? Just three days later, on April 30, MakerWorld launched its first charitable Points Donation feature. On day one alone, 8,000 points were raised.
As of May 26, 555 contributors have donated 102,622 points, that represents about more than $8,300 in platform credit — enough to redeem more than 400 rolls of PLA Basic filament, or approximately 13 units of P2S. The donation pool remains open until June 1, 2026.
Donated points will be converted directly into filament, printers, and production resources, with MakerWorld facilitating delivery to Pascal. Three P1S printers currently sustain the two-week production-to-clinic cadence and are running near full capacity. As donated points convert into additional equipment and materials, that cadence is expected to accelerate meaningfully, keeping pace with growing internal demand: the Augsburg puncture rooms, the Stupfzimmer, have recently requested their own dedicated 3D boxes.
MakerWorld's Role — Infrastructure the Community Could Use
For MakerWorld, what's worth sharing here is not only goodwill itself, but what existing platform infrastructure made possible once a member-led cause found a clear workflow. The contest used MakerWorld's standard competition framework, adapted with Pascal into the platform's first charity design contest. When the community asked how to do more, the first Points Donation feature shipped within days, turning a recurring forum question into a productized support path. The same systems that normally reward creators for downloads and community activity became a bridge from digital credit to bedside hardware, without Pascal building custom tooling or running parallel logistics.
How to Be Part of This
Looking Ahead
On June 1, MakerWorld will formally close the Pieksekisten Points Donation pool. After the campaign ends, MakerWorld will publish a follow-up impact report summarizing final donation totals, converted materials, and project delivery progress.
Pascal is deliberately cautious about scaling beyond Augsburg.
"Pediatric oncology wards are protected for very good reasons — and they should be. The real bottleneck is access, not production. The goal is first to build a model that works reliably here, and only then to consider whether it could responsibly be transferred elsewhere." — Pascal
"This project showed us something we'd never seen before: a charity that runs on creativity instead of logistics. Designers contributed from São Paulo, Berlin, and beyond — and their gifts printed themselves across the world. We're proud to have built the infrastructure that lets a community's care travel directly from a designer's screen to a child's hand."
—Qianye, Creator Operation of MakerWorld
About MakerWorld
MakerWorld is the world's largest 3D model sharing, downloading, and printing community, operated by Bambu Lab. With over 2 million free models and thousands of new designs added daily, MakerWorld is accessible directly through its website or via Bambu software such as Bambu Studio, championing a mission of community-driven, technology-for-good. Learn more at makerworld.com
About Bambu Lab
Bambu Lab is a consumer-tech company focusing on desktop 3D printers. Its state-of-the-art 3D printers offer a feature-rich first-class experience for a global community of 3D printing makers, aiming to break the barriers between the digital and physical worlds and bring creativity to a whole new level. Bambu Lab sells its 3D printers, filaments, and accessories on its official website, serving customers across 30+ countries.
Learn more at Bambu Lab Official Website
For those who wish to explore further
AUGSBURG, Germany, May 30, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- MakerWorld's first user-initiated charity design contest has completed: winners have now been selected from 2,056 models submitted by 1,008 creators worldwide. Created in support of the Pieksekisten project, the contest drew more than 250,000 unique visitors and is helping turn digital designs, platform points, and community goodwill into 3D-printed gifts for children in cancer wards.
From a Personal Journey to a Shared Mission
Pieksekisten, literally "comfort boxes" in German, are small boxes filled with gifts for children who have just undergone treatment, examinations, or stressful hospital appointments. They are not grand presents, but they can offer something kind in a difficult moment. After a shot or a blood draw, a small object a child gets to choose for themselves can mean everything.
The project began in February 2023, in the day clinic of the Augsburg Pediatric Oncology Center, where Pascal Neumann's son Thore was being treated for Grade IV medulloblastoma, an aggressive pediatric brain tumor. Pascal's partner Silke began asking how small positive moments could be created for children on the ward, after a defining instance one day: a song played on the radio after Thore's MRI examination, and it became achingly clear how exhausting clinical routine truly is for young children, not only medically, but emotionally.
The first Pieksekisten arrived at the clinic in March 2023, filled with classic small gifts. 3D printing was added later, when Pascal noticed something his son did with the rough early prints from his beginner-level 3D printer:
"For me, it was a failed print. For him, it was something his father had made for him. He was happy about things I myself would have thrown away long before."
Thore passed away in October 2023, at just five years old.
The project is carried today by Pascal and Silke together, with a clear division of work: Silke coordinates with the hospital ward, including appointments, on-site handovers, direct communication with clinical staff, and Instagram documentation, while Pascal handles the technical infrastructure, including the website, MakerWorld and Bambu Lab communications, model curation, and printing. Early on, the pediatric clinic acknowledged the project in an official letter of thanks, explicitly recognizing the real-world effect of these small positive moments on children during difficult treatments. The hospital and pediatric oncology context is included here as the personal and real-world background that inspired and shaped the project, not as a statement of formal institutional hospital involvement or official partnership.
As word spread through the MakerWorld community, a platform where 2 million users share, remix, and download models daily, designers began spontaneously contributing models. Even before any formal contest, Pascal had documented permissions from more than 50 designers, secured one by one through forum messages and direct conversations. The growing enthusiasm caught the attention of the MakerWorld team, who reached out to Pascal to formalize what was already happening organically.
"MakerWorld was the first place where all of this came together: people already designing exactly the right kinds of things, an active printing community, real practical feasibility, and a platform where an idea could very quickly become something tangible and useful." — Pascal
Why Not Just Mail Toys? — A Controlled Pipeline of Goodwill
Every model that enters a Pieksekiste begins as a file on a creator's workstation, often on the other side of the world. A designer uploads a file to MakerWorld. Pascal clicks download. Seconds later, the file is on his printer, building layer by layer. It's like sending a fax, but what's transmitted isn't text; it's warmth you can hold in your hand.
International shipping of a physical toy typically costs $20–50 per parcel and takes 2–6 weeks, plus customs forms. The same care, sent as a file and printed locally? Within a day. Less than a dollar. Nearly zero carbon footprint.
On MakerWorld, models are designed to work seamlessly with Bambu Lab printers, and many come with ready-to-use print profiles. Pascal currently runs three Bambu Lab P1S Combo systems, identical units expanded over time for reliability, achieving a 98% usable production rate in daily operation.
These are not items pulled from a warehouse shelf. As Pascal puts it, they are consciously made, with time, attention, and the thought of giving one child a small positive moment. What children pick first on the ward, what gets handled most often, and what staff see working in practice feeds directly back into the next round of model selection, creating a closed loop between bedside reality and production planning.
And the designs themselves remain freely available. Anyone can download and print their own version, imagining it now in the hands of another child fighting their own battle somewhere in the world.
But controlled goodwill is not only about logistics. It is also about how a gift reaches a child. The Pieksekisten are not open toy boxes. They are placed at specific points within the treatment workflow — the finger-prick room and examination rooms 3 and 5 — and used only under nurse supervision. After a procedure, a child chooses one small object for themselves, with staff present.
"The boxes are a deliberately placed and controlled point of handover within everyday clinical life," Pascal explains. "Not an open toy offering."
This level of control is medical, not organizational. Many of the children on the ward are severely immunocompromised. For now, Pascal accepts no externally printed finished pieces, only digital files transformed into physical objects through his own equipment, on PLA filament, with every print visually inspected before it leaves his hands.
"As soon as material quality, production quality, or safety can no longer be reliably verified, the sustainability of the project itself would immediately be at risk."
A Charity Contest That Broke New Ground
On April 2, 2026, MakerWorld launched the Pieksekisten Design Contest, the platform's first charity contest, co-developed by a community member in partnership with MakerWorld. While the contest page was formally "Hosted By U: @JamesDaRock," the initiative grew from a true meeting of minds: designers had already been contributing for weeks, and the MakerWorld team built the contest framework together with Pascal to give that goodwill a proper home.
Within three weeks, 1,008 creators submitted 2,056 distinct models, with the contest page drawing more than 250,000 unique visitors. Before the contest, the project had run on permissions from roughly 50 designers, gathered one by one over many months through Bambu Lab forum messages and direct conversations. In three weeks, that creative pool expanded roughly 40-fold. Today, about half of the documented production batches in active circulation already trace back to contest submissions.
Each submission was reviewed by Pascal for safety, child-appropriateness, and print reliability. Throughout, he applied the same standard he had used from day one: no model enters a Pieksekiste without clear, documented permission from its designer.
"A model is not just a file. It is the time, experience, and creative work of a person — and that is exactly how it should be treated."
"Just because you can print something does not automatically mean you should simply take it."
Winners Announced
The top three winning designs reflect the practical and emotional range of the brief:
- 1st Place: Wall Decor & IV Stand Clip Pieksekisten x Art Zig by @La Forge d'Orion
- 2nd Place: Puppet Theater with Puppets and Scenery by @berri3D
- 3rd Place: Brain Teaser Puzzle Board | 48 Challenges | 5 Levels by @PrecisionCrafts
The Community Favorite award went to Pieksi – A friend from a syringe @DIY Wizard.
The Kids Choice selection is still underway. Finalists will be introduced to children in the ward, and the designs that spark the greatest smiles will be announced publicly on the MakerWorld contest page once the children's voting process is complete.
"Every model submitted carried someone's time, care, and imagination, and many of them will continue to be reviewed, printed, and tested in the real everyday life of the ward. To everyone who contributed: thank you for helping us create more of those moments."
— Pascal Neumann
Points Donation — Converting Earned Credit into Bedside Gifts
Throughout the competition, participants repeatedly asked whether they could help beyond submitting models. The community itself surfaced the answer: could there be a way to donate points directly to support Pascal? Just three days later, on April 30, MakerWorld launched its first charitable Points Donation feature. On day one alone, 8,000 points were raised.
As of May 26, 555 contributors have donated 102,622 points, that represents about more than $8,300 in platform credit — enough to redeem more than 400 rolls of PLA Basic filament, or approximately 13 units of P2S. The donation pool remains open until June 1, 2026.
Donated points will be converted directly into filament, printers, and production resources, with MakerWorld facilitating delivery to Pascal. Three P1S printers currently sustain the two-week production-to-clinic cadence and are running near full capacity. As donated points convert into additional equipment and materials, that cadence is expected to accelerate meaningfully, keeping pace with growing internal demand: the Augsburg puncture rooms, the Stupfzimmer, have recently requested their own dedicated 3D boxes.
MakerWorld's Role — Infrastructure the Community Could Use
For MakerWorld, what's worth sharing here is not only goodwill itself, but what existing platform infrastructure made possible once a member-led cause found a clear workflow. The contest used MakerWorld's standard competition framework, adapted with Pascal into the platform's first charity design contest. When the community asked how to do more, the first Points Donation feature shipped within days, turning a recurring forum question into a productized support path. The same systems that normally reward creators for downloads and community activity became a bridge from digital credit to bedside hardware, without Pascal building custom tooling or running parallel logistics.
How to Be Part of This
Looking Ahead
On June 1, MakerWorld will formally close the Pieksekisten Points Donation pool. After the campaign ends, MakerWorld will publish a follow-up impact report summarizing final donation totals, converted materials, and project delivery progress.
Pascal is deliberately cautious about scaling beyond Augsburg.
"Pediatric oncology wards are protected for very good reasons — and they should be. The real bottleneck is access, not production. The goal is first to build a model that works reliably here, and only then to consider whether it could responsibly be transferred elsewhere." — Pascal
"This project showed us something we'd never seen before: a charity that runs on creativity instead of logistics. Designers contributed from São Paulo, Berlin, and beyond — and their gifts printed themselves across the world. We're proud to have built the infrastructure that lets a community's care travel directly from a designer's screen to a child's hand."
—Qianye, Creator Operation of MakerWorld
About MakerWorld
MakerWorld is the world's largest 3D model sharing, downloading, and printing community, operated by Bambu Lab. With over 2 million free models and thousands of new designs added daily, MakerWorld is accessible directly through its website or via Bambu software such as Bambu Studio, championing a mission of community-driven, technology-for-good. Learn more at makerworld.com
About Bambu Lab
Bambu Lab is a consumer-tech company focusing on desktop 3D printers. Its state-of-the-art 3D printers offer a feature-rich first-class experience for a global community of 3D printing makers, aiming to break the barriers between the digital and physical worlds and bring creativity to a whole new level. Bambu Lab sells its 3D printers, filaments, and accessories on its official website, serving customers across 30+ countries.
Learn more at Bambu Lab Official Website
For those who wish to explore further
** This press release is distributed by PR Newswire through automated distribution system, for which the client assumes full responsibility. **
MakerWorld's First User-Initiated Charity Contest Names Winners, Bringing Global Creators' Goodwill Directly to Cancer Wards
MakerWorld's First User-Initiated Charity Contest Names Winners, Bringing Global Creators' Goodwill Directly to Cancer Wards
MakerWorld's First User-Initiated Charity Contest Names Winners, Bringing Global Creators' Goodwill Directly to Cancer Wards
MakerWorld's First User-Initiated Charity Contest Names Winners, Bringing Global Creators' Goodwill Directly to Cancer Wards
MakerWorld's First User-Initiated Charity Contest Names Winners, Bringing Global Creators' Goodwill Directly to Cancer Wards