What happens when a major 3D printer manufacturer teams up with a design studio and releases footwear files that anyone can download, print, and remix? Bambu Lab and Presq are finding out. Their Fig.(0) project takes 3D-printed shoes out of the luxury market and drops them into the maker community, where cultural relevance and customization matter more than brand names. This isn’t some half-baked Kickstarter experiment or a corporate PR stunt with limited-edition hype. It’s a fully open-source shoe design, complete with CAD files, print profiles, and a scaling system that lets you resize it for any foot. The message is clear: if you’ve got a 3D printer and some flexible filament, you’re now part of the footwear industry.
The Fig.(0) is a slip-on clog with a perforated upper, designed for comfort and breathability, but the real story isn’t the aesthetics. It’s the fact that Bambu Lab, a company known for pushing desktop 3D printing speeds to absurd limits, and Presq, a design studio with a knack for blending tech and culture, decided to drop this as a free, remixable project. They’re not selling shoes. They’re selling the idea that shoes don’t have to come from a factory halfway across the world. The files are hosted on MakerWorld, Bambu’s platform for 3D print assets, and they include everything you’d need to start printing your own pair: a pre-sliced .3mf file optimized for their H2D printers, a scaling coefficient table for resizing, and even a full CAD file for deep customization. The materials? Matte TPE 85A for the flexible parts, PLA for supports. The printer settings? Dialed in for Bambu’s machines, but adaptable if you’re willing to tweak.
Designers: Presq & Bambu Lab
You’ve seen 3D-printed shoes before, probably from brands like Adidas or Nike, who’ve been playing with lattice structures and futuristic soles for years. Those shoes cost a fortune, they’re locked behind patents, and you can’t do anything with them except wear them until they fall apart. This is different. The Fig.(0) files are open, meaning you can download them, modify them, and print them however you like. Want to add a tread pattern inspired by your favorite hiking boots? Go for it. Need a wider fit because your feet are weirdly shaped? Adjust the CAD file. The whole project is built on the idea that footwear shouldn’t be a static product but a dynamic, evolvable thing. It’s a philosophy that’s been floating around in the maker community for years, but this is the first time it’s been executed with this level of polish and intent.
The files are optimized for Bambu’s H2D printers, which are fast, reliable, and capable of handling flexible filaments like TPE. But here’s the thing: you don’t need a Bambu printer to make these work. The STL and CAD files are there, so if you’ve got a decent FDM machine that can handle TPE, you can probably get it done with some trial and error. The scaling table is a nice touch, too. Instead of guessing how to resize the shoe for your foot, you’ve got a reference that tells you exactly how to adjust the dimensions. It’s not perfect, of course. Fit is still going to be a personal experiment, especially if you’re using a different printer or material. But the fact that they’ve included these tools at all shows they’re serious about making this accessible.
Presq’s founder, Adam Saleh, has talked about keeping “cultural value closer to the communities that create it,” which is a fancy way of saying this project is as much about empowerment as it is about footwear. The idea is to shift some of the power from big brands to local makers, artists, and small businesses. It’s a noble goal, but it’s also a practical one. If you’re a designer in Lagos or a maker in Mumbai, you don’t need to wait for Nike to notice your market. You can print, customize, and sell your own versions of these shoes, tailored to your community’s needs and tastes. That’s a big deal in a world where most footwear is still mass-produced in a handful of factories and shipped globally.
The Fig.(0) isn’t just a one-off, either. Presq has said they plan to release new open-source shoe designs every month, each with its own style and functional twist. That kind of commitment turns this from a cool experiment into a legitimate movement. Imagine a future where small studios and independent makers are pumping out localized, culturally specific footwear, all built on a shared open-source foundation. It’s a vision that’s equal parts utopian and practical, and it’s one that Bambu Lab and Presq are actively pushing forward.
Of course, there are limitations. The initial release is optimized for a US Men’s Size 10, so if you’re outside that range, you’ll need to do some scaling (Presq has provided a scaling table that lets you effectively go down to a size 6 or up to a 13.5). The materials matter, too. TPE 85A is flexible and durable, but it’s not as forgiving as traditional shoe materials. If you print with something too stiff, you’ll end up with a clog that feels like a plastic prison for your feet. And while the files are open, they’re still designed with Bambu’s ecosystem in mind, so if you’re using a different printer, you might need to spend some time dialing in the settings. But these aren’t dealbreakers. They’re just the realities of working with a new, open system.
For now, though, the Fig.(0) is a proof of concept that open-source footwear can be stylish, functional, and accessible. It’s a challenge to the idea that shoes have to come from big brands with big budgets. And it’s an invitation to anyone with a 3D printer to start thinking about what footwear could look like if it were designed by the people who wear it, not the corporations that sell it. If that sounds like your kind of project, the files are waiting on MakerWorld. Just don’t blame me if you end up with a closet full of prototype clogs.
The post The Age of 3D Printable Footwear Is Here, and It’s Open-Source first appeared on Yanko Design.