>>10012240Thanks for the replies, and I was initially considering a static figure with no joints like a statue but I kinda already have one in the form of a custom Lego figure.
So a figure like this with complex joints I am new to, and I am trying to identify what works.
I am not planning on getting it printed in color, just split and keyed on the model, then printed, painted, and assembled once done.
The question of printer type I’ve been trying to figure out, as my new guy who is working on it (pic related, I know his work is kinda the same as the last guy) but he is willing to test the joints out on a DLM printer and wagers if it can endure in that type then someone with an FDM can certainly do it, and isn’t charging by the hour.
>The goal of articulating figures is to give them the best articulation providing the most range of movement in the least obtrusive way possibleAs you can see with the joints here it’s obviously failing in that department but my guy is more willing to test these joints by continuously printing the given joints and seeing if they endure then cleaning it up and seeing if more details could hold up without intrusion or degradation.
I am trying to get other modelers but their terms are either closed, overly expensive, or inexperienced