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Most consumer 3-D printers use "ink" made of colored plastic line. But despite the self-reliant and Earth-friendly bent of many 3-D printing hobbyists, it's surprisingly difficult to find 3-D printing line, or filament, that's made of recycled plastic—even though the type of plastic used, ABS plastic, is easily recyclable from old plastic bottles. Now a Seattle-based entrepreneur, Liz Havlin, aims to change that with a machine that turns recycled plastic into filament suitable for loading into any mainstream 3-D printer.
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- People:
- Liz Havlin
- Places:
- Seattle
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