Touchable Speculation: Crafting Critical Discourse with 3D Printing, Maker Practices, and Hypermapping

maker culture

Maker culture, under such a name, began to rise to formalized popularity in the mid-2000s. It centers on hands-on, DIY, often technology-based making in education, entrepreneurial pursuits, and everyday life.

3D printing is often considered both a tool and method of making, often as a means to learn more about 3D computer-assisted design (CAD) and/or create prototypes for innovative, often entrepreneurial, pursuits. Makerspaces, community spaces geared toward housing or fostering this maker ethos, often house and supply technologies and tools needed for making. A 3D printer is often a central feature, though certainly not always, of a makerspace.

See also: critiques of making (a pop-up note you will find throughout this project).

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