In my youth, when I was backpacking around the world I spent a few months in Seattle but I never got to see the peak of the Mt. Rainier until the day that I flew out of Tacoma airport, and there above the clouds was the peak of the mountain. It is an image burnt into my memory, of a time in my life of freedom and wonder.
Of course as time passes, memory fades and one forgets or exaggerates the past, so it is always nice to have a little something to hold the memory fast in one's mind. A postcard may act as a trigger, but it is so one dimensional, and could never capture 'that view'. Now TinyMtn comes to the rescue with, tiny 3D printed mountains. Now I can have Mt. Ranier 3D printed on my desktop, and when I want to reminisce, I can drop some dry ice in a glass of water for an impromptu cloud, pull out my iPhone with an Olloclip attachment and fly it around the mountain, peering into the screen just like I peered out of the window in awe of the mountain peak, so many years ago. Thank you TinyMtn...
Shapeways community member, Pookas, recently pimped out an old racing cycle frame with some 3D Printed additional features.
A Carrying Handle, Lightning Valve Caps, and a Bottle Fender Mount.
We love to see 3D Printing being used to enhance every day products, what add-ons have you made?
Plato once wrote, "At the touch of love, everyone becomes a poet." Perhaps had he known about 3D printing, he would have said, "With the touch of love, everyone becomes a designer."
With Valentine's Day fast approaching, love is surely in the air. We've seen amazing works of art and design inspired by love, including a 3D printed wedding ring, but that's just the tip of the iceberg. 3D printing is an incredible technology for custom wedding designs, from cake toppers to custom table settings to veils.
We are running a contest to see what innovative new designs you can come up with for a 3D printed wedding!
We're joined by guest judge Kelly Phillips Badal, senior editor and the in-house crafter at Country Living magazine, specializing in crafts, design, and entertaining. Her writing has also appeared in Better Homes & Gardens, Seventeen, and Fitnessmagazine.com.

Alan Hudson, Shapeways Director of 3D Tools, has been working on a tool to make it easy to create 3D objects from 2D images. Think of it as the next generation of our 2D to 3D. We've gotten the software far enough along that we're ready to show off to a larger group. After your feedback we'll fix it up and then release it as open source software.
If you've got an interest in 3D printing and can wrangle a 2D image then we've got something for you to try!
On January 15th at 7pm at Office Nomads in Seattle we'll be letting you play with the software, have some drinks and discuss 3D printing.
If you'd like to run the software during the session then please bring a laptop and some image software. We've been working with Illustrator, Photoshop, Inkscape and Gimp so far. The software takes in JPEG or PNG images. A good resolution to use 300 DPI images.
RSVP via Meetup to enter the third dimension!
Tell us a little bit about yourself: Who are you? Where are you located?
I am Bo, originally from Denmark, now living and working in Hollywood, California. My background is photography and graphic design.

What's the story behind your designs? What inspires you to design for the GoPro?
My designs are mostly created to solve my own needs and wants. The GoPro for me is a amazing camera, which truly shows how scale and technology affect how we do things, because it creates images with quality better than my broadcast cameras of years ago.
I did actually take classes in 3D animation in the nineties, but 3D product design is something I have slowly figured out the hard way. I probably learned to think in 3D from my mother who is very artistic and "forced" us as kids to draw, to work in clay, and generally hammer together and build whatever we were thinking. So when we saw a TV program about pirates, we would later be building a pirate ship in the backyard.
How do you promote your work?
I don't really promote like I should, most of my sales are from word of mouth, from happy customers using my designs. I write a blog, where I share my thoughts about photography.
To help get in the Valentine's Day mood, we are featuring 3D printed products from the Shapeways community that are a bit more lovey dovey than the average 3D printed item. In preparation for Valentines Day, don't forget to tag your products using "valentine"! Tags relating to themes and occasions will help your products get found in search.
Kardia Heart Pendant design by Gilbert13, displays the anatomical beauty of the heart in all its glory.
Simply Love design by Salokannel, a ring for someone special in your life.
Love Seat for iPad design by Ibec, for the techie in your life! 
It's Friday, your mind is on the weekend instead of the work at hand, a hot cup of coffee from a 3D printed Curios Cat Mug for that extra feline hit of catfeine...
Often the most meaningful gifts are the ones that you make yourself for the one you love. Buying a bunch of roses and a teddy bear from the gas station on the way home on Valentine's Day although efficient, is not exactly romantic. Shapeways community member jrey made a beautiful gift for his wife for their second wedding anniversary.
Jrey's wife is from the Bahamas so he designed a sea shell ring and set of earrings to remind her of home and had them 3D printed in Sterling Silver by Shapeways. The jewelry looks beautiful and she absolutely loved them. Now this is the only jewelry of it's kind in the entire world, made especially for one woman designed for her alone by her husband. This is the kind of gift that will be passed on for generations, with the grandmother telling the granddaughter the story of it's creation, and the depth of meaning that far exceeds any item bought off of the shelf.
To address this, we want to put together a 3D Printing Copyrights 101 guide in the next few weeks, with the help of Public Knowledge's Michael Weinberg who wrote the awesome whitepaper "It will be awesome if they don't screw it up".

We've done a few blog posts covering the debate over the last two years, and now we want to consolidate new information and answer your questions.
The list so far includes:
What else do you want to know?
List your questions here and we'll incorporate them into the guide!
If you are like me, with impeccable (cough) taste and want to share your refined aesthetic and eye for the coolest designs, be sure to add them to your favorites. We will start using your favorites to curate the homepage on Shapeways and we will also feature your selection on the Shapeways blog. You can include your own designs in your favorites but if yours are chosen, we will only feature one of your items along side other designs that you love.
To add an item to your favorites is easy, simply hit the heart to the side of an item on it's product page.
If you think you have an awesome selection already in your favorites, comment on the blog with you Shapeways user name. If you do not have any favorites yet, why not browse through the Shapeways site, favorite a few that you like and enter your user name here too. We could be featuring your favorites next...
Another family 3D printing project to hit Shapeways is the Controller Pendant by stop4stuff. Not only is it a story of a father and son, working together on a creative project, but also a story entrepreneurial spirit. If the design sells, the boy get's his pocket money without doing any additional work, but most importantly, the boy get's his pocket money without it coming out of his father's pocket.... Win, win.
Some time last year (2012) my 13 year old son, Nath, was trying to think up ways to make a bit of extra pocket money. Knowing Nath's artistic flair, I suggested a design of something he could have 3D printed. Nath drew up the design on paper, I did the 3D model work and between us we came up with the style of the pendant based on an Xbox games console controller.
Ordered on the 15th December, the pendant arrived on the 2nd January, in plenty of time for his birthday next week.
This is Nath's first design and any markups from this model all go to Nath.
So, if you want an awesome pendant for yourself or your gamer friend, go for the Controller Pendant and support teenage entrepreneurship. Happy Birthday Nath...
VertigoPolka has designed a giant 7 foot long 3D printed necklace of 185 interconnected Octahedrons. The super cool image may catch your eye but the price will blow your mind. But if 7 feet of 3D printed awesomeness is too much for you there is also the original 36 Inch Octahedralink Necklace and the mid length 55 Inch version. Or get all three and strut your stuff with 175 inches (4.45 metres) of 3D printed jewelry around your neck.

What's the story behind your designs? What inspires you?

The products in my Shapeways shop, are basically products I needed myself. I couldn't buy them anywhere so I decided to design them myself. While enjoying the results I thought more people could benefit the solutions and I decided to make my designs available to everyone. That turned out to be a good idea. People where having the same problems and suddenly I was selling thoughful solutions. This was especially visible by the product Clip-it, a simple clip to convert your iPhone charger to a travel dock. The phone is somehow designed to have a flat battery within a day, so designing an easy charging solution made sense and turned out to be something people wanted worldwide.
I'm inspired by lots of influencers, some not even designers. I have great respect for people like Steve Jobs, Bill Moggridge, Charles & Ray Eames, Jonathan Ive, Philippe Starck. To name another designer, I admire Dieter Rams a lot, he of course doesn't need any further introduction. The work he achieved and how it influenced the product world, it is just phenomenal. From the Shapeways community, I really like the work of the Curve Creative guys.
Check out Remi's beautiful products for your iPhone on his Shapeways Shop, his website, and stay up to date with his designs via Twitter.
Shapeways community member and design for 3D printing specialist Cunicode has just launched Crayon Creatures, a simple way to take your child's drawing to 3D print thanks to Shapeways 3D printing, because sticking your child's drawing to the fridge is so 2011.
With Crayon Creatures all you need to do is scan or photograph your child's drawing and upload it to be converted into a 3D form, 3D printed and sent to your door. Each drawing is 3d modeled based exactly on the drawing, not wrapped around a default form so every 3D printed figure is as unique as your child's drawing.
You can see a few of the Crayon Creatures already created in Cunicode's Shapeways shop.
We are seeing more and more applications on Shapeways that make it easy to 3D print without learning how to 3D model. At the same time as we see complex 3D modeling and scanning tools become cheaper and easier to use, we are also seeing these applications and services that allow anyone can make what they want with 3D printing, lowering the barrier to entry.
If there was a perfect tool to make 3D printing easier, what do you think it should be?
Take a look at some of these 3D printed products, fresh for 2013 from the Shapeways community. We are looking forward to seeing what 2013 brings, new designs, new materials, new colors, new resolutions....
Design by Gromfrog
Design by Nitneroc69
National Small Business week contest! Post a photo of you and your product (or your mascot and your??instagram.com/p/atsN9gM8Y6/F7
Once a month we hold our live video chat with the Shapeways community.
That moment is happening now.
Join us at shapeways.com/community/live