A copy of a slightly different version (missing some last minute fixes) is on printables if you want to see it. I may update it when I get a chance.
One reason it is not easy is that the actual basement has an inscription on the underside that the uploaded one doesn't have. Having spent a career in IT, I am more circumspect with pictures and information about grandkids and kids (both my sons are also in IT).
I 3d printed the Basement (purple, yellow, gray, pink). The dollhouse above the basement existed and was made by my daughter in laws long time deceased father. My daughter in laws daughter now plays with her mothers (my daughter in law) dollhouse. She (my granddaughter) has never met her other grandfather (the one who built the dollhouse).
Over the past couple of years I have been printing furniture for the dollhouse (1/12 scale). Some items I download and modify (dresser, flowerpots, flowers, cat-tree, cats) some items I almost completely design. The bunk bed is a design that I acquired a 3d rendering from Ikea and converted to a printable model and significantly modified.
I have been looking at the house (which formally sat on a box) and thinking how could I enlarge it WITHOUT taking away from its creator. I decided to make a basement.
I started with a cinderblock:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:4212534 and built up the entire basement in prusaslicer. I added mortar in-between the the cinderblocks. Slicing it I found that the internal geometry of the cinderblocks were more than I wanted. SO around the edges there are still complete cinderblocks, but most of the blocks were individually replaced one at a time with blocks that I had modified in tinkercad (basically I filled in the holes in the center of the blocks but kept their end geometry).
Besides the blocks, there is of course the mortar, the base and the 3 windows. I designed the windows in tinkercad loosely based on my houses basement windows, did a test print with random fillament and had to modify various dimensions to make it more robust. Like my house the windows have leaks :-). The window glass is some old overhead projector transparency slides cut to shape.
The blocks have the FUZZY skin property (on the blocks), except for the ones that go through the CUT zones. I found that when you cut a model the fuzzy skin property will wrap around through the cut zone. For those blocks I had to remove the property and paint on the fuzzy skin on the faces I wanted.
I landed up giving almost every single block a unique identifier in the slicer.
It's about 610 x 284 x 235 mm about 24 x 11 3/16 x 9 1/4 inches. The base (gray) of the basement is cut in half to fit on the XL (it doesn't need much of a wipe tower as it's only a few mm high). The main part of the basement is cut into 3 sections.
The main part uses alignment pins, the base uses a puzzle like connection for the 2 halfs. And there is sort of a channel I made in the base (by putting negative blocks in the slicer (sort of) on top of the base).
The main parts are printed upside down of course to minimize supports. Still due to fear there are much more supports than needed requiring significant time to carefully pick off. I used PLA for the model and PETG for the supports FULL CONTACT!.
I printed this very slowly took about 15 days more or less, I think. 5 prints. One day of very scared glueing.
MAJOR GLUE TRICK.... In reading about printing polypropylene I learned it doesn't like to stick to any other plastic. Some quick web searching and I saw that packing tape (the 3m scotch stuff you get at Costco) is polypropylene. I coated the top of a table with packing tape. WHEN I GLUED THE BASE TOGETHER AND THE GLUE LEAKED UNDER it did NOT stick significantly to the packing tape !!!!
I purchased significant supplies of each of the colors of fillament under the theory that stuff often goes wrong. ALMOST NOTHING WENT WRONG, one failed print within 1/2 an inch of the print bed only. SO I have lots of each color left :-).
Replacing it now you can see the aprox print time and usage. Prusaslicer with the XL gives a reasonably spot on estimate of this.
MAJOR TIPS: if you are insane and decide to model something large in the slicer
*) During your design phase lie to the slicer and enlarge the settings in the slicer for your printer so that it things the bed is large enough for your entire model
*) Really consider giving each and every part a unique name
*) When you are ready to cut it to shape you set the printer size back
Funny stuff...
My DIL (daughter in law) hates bugs. I took someone's spider (this is not in the model I uploaded) scalled it down and placed lots of them on/in a mat 1 layer thick of clear fillament. This way the tiny bugs dont make a mess. I printed a number of these mats of spiders so the basement is infested. They are loose (the mats) - the granddaughter lovers them,
Also, my DIL HATES RATS but is a former pastry chief and likes RATATOUILLE - I took someones model for that fixed up its eyes and tail (I may upload this to printables when I get a chance) gave it fuzzy skin and he was hideing behind some loose cinderblocks that were in the basement.
Also in the rear left hand corner there is a depression for a sump pump :-).
I think this has been almost 2 months of my life - I delivered it yesterday (Friday) I am now suffering from POST PROJECT DEPRESSION (letdown), I mean for the past few weeks whenever I closed my eyes I saw cinderblocks.
Today I spent the day doing most of my XL's maintance cycle. LONG overdue. I still want to do some recalibrations but... see above letdown.
PS: Other granddaughters (the twins) have requested a 1/16 dollhouse for their new toys - for that I will download one from makerworld someone else has done.
- Kurt-A (The other non evil kurt who is insane)