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Home » MIT experts come up with solution for a well-known 3D-printing fumble
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MIT experts come up with solution for a well-known 3D-printing fumble

By dailyguardian.aeApril 6, 20262 Mins Read
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3D printing is supposed to make prototyping easier, but anyone who’s used it knows the pain. You design something, hit print, wait hours… and then realize it looks nothing like what you imagined. Wrong texture, weird color shifts, or just an overall “this isn’t it” moment. Now, researchers at MIT think they’ve found a fix for that exact headache.

MIT’s new tool tackles a classic 3D-printing frustration

The team has developed a new preview system called VisiPrint, designed to show users what a 3D-printed object will actually look like before printing it. Unlike traditional tools that focus on structure and function, this one prioritizes visual accuracy, things like color, gloss, translucency, and texture.

Here’s how it works: users feed in a design screenshot from slicing software along with an image of the material they plan to use. The system then generates a realistic preview that mimics how the final object will appear after printing, factoring in how materials and fabrication processes affect the outcome.

That might sound like a small tweak, but it solves a very real problem. Current preview tools often miss aesthetic details, which leads to multiple failed prints and wasted material. Some estimates even suggest up to a third of 3D printing material ends up as waste due to discarded prototypes.

Why this could be a bigger deal than it sounds

On the surface, this feels like a quality-of-life upgrade. But it actually addresses one of the biggest inefficiencies in 3D printing: trial and error. By giving users a more accurate “what you see is what you get” preview, it could save time, reduce waste, and make the whole process less frustrating.

A 3D printer in action.

Of course, it’s still early, and real-world adoption will depend on how well it integrates with existing workflows. But if tools like VisiPrint take off, the days of printing something and immediately regretting it might finally be numbered.

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