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For parents

What Can You Make With a 3D Pen? Beginner Project Ideas

What Can You Make With a 3D Pen? Beginner Project Ideas

Short answer: With a 3D pen you can make flat traced designs, freehand 3D sculptures, and built-up models — keychains, figurines, jewellery, miniature buildings, costume props and school projects. Beginners start by tracing a stencil flat, then build upward into three dimensions.

A 3D pen turns a blank page into a build. Here's how to go from first squiggle to finished object — and dozens of ideas to try.

How does making with a 3D pen work?

Three techniques, and most projects mix them. Tracing (drawing flat over a printed stencil, then peeling it off), freehand drawing (lifting the pen to build in the air), and welding (joining flat pieces into a 3D object). Beginners start flat — it's the fastest way to a confident first result.

Easy first projects (Beginner · 15–30 min)

  • A name keychain or fridge magnet
  • A flat star, heart or letter traced from a stencil
  • A simple butterfly or flower
  • A phone-stand frame
  • Doodled bookmarks

These build pen control — speed, pressure and lifting — without frustration.

Step-up projects (Intermediate · 30–60 min)

  • Freestanding figurines and little animals
  • A miniature house or bridge
  • Bracelets, rings and pendants
  • Costume and cosplay details
  • Repairs — rebuild a broken clip or peg

Ideas by what your child loves

  • Loves animals? Build a zoo of small creatures.
  • Into space? A rocket, planets, an astronaut.
  • Likes fashion? Jewellery and accessory design.
  • Building-minded? Bridges, towers, working hinges.
  • Gamers? Favourite characters and icons in 3D.

3D pen projects for the classroom

The same pen turns abstract lessons into objects: geometric shapes and nets in maths, cell and molecule models in science, terrain maps in geography, structural bridges in design and technology. (Teachers: see 3D pen STEAM activities by subject.)

What filament should a beginner use?

Start with PLA — the easiest, lowest-odour and most forgiving material, ideal for kids and decorative work. EDUstick kits ship with a Magic Filament PLA starter set, so there's nothing extra to buy on day one. Branch into other materials once the basics feel natural.

Three tips for great first builds

  1. Go slow. Control comes before speed.
  2. Trace before you build. Flat practice teaches the motion.
  3. Let it cool. Give each line a second to set before the next.

Ready to start making? Get the EDUstick SOLO — it comes with everything you need for the first project.


Frequently asked questions

  • What can you make with a 3D pen? Flat traced designs, freehand 3D sculptures and welded models — keychains, figurines, jewellery, miniature buildings, costume props and school projects.
  • What should beginners make first with a 3D pen? Start flat: trace a stencil shape like a star or name keychain to learn pen control, then build upward into 3D objects.
  • What is the best filament for 3D pen beginners? PLA — the easiest, safest and most forgiving, and it works well for children and decorative projects.
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