Search models, users, collections, and posts

Moonveil Scepter

Print Profile(1)

All
X1 Carbon
H2S
P1P
X1E
X1
H2D
P1S
A1
H2C
H2D Pro
P2S
X2D
A2L

0.1mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
0.1mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
Designer
10.9 h
1 plate

Open in Bambu Studio
Boost
3
8
2
0
1
0
Released 

Description

Moonveil Scepter

Some scepters exist to command attention.
The Moonveil Scepter exists to command restraint.

Carved from a single, continuous form, the Moonveil Scepter favors discipline over excess. Its matte black surface is shaped with deliberate simplicity, marked by a controlled spiral that suggests gathered intent rather than unchecked motion. Nothing here is ornamental without purpose.

Measured bands circle the shaft at even intervals. Their spacing is precise, ritualistic. They do not reinforce the scepter’s strength — they define its limits, emphasizing containment over amplification.

At the crown, a pale crescent curves protectively around a quiet moonstone orb. The stone does not glow, pulse, or radiate spectacle. Its presence is calm and lunar, evoking patience, observation, and control. The crescent does not pierce or dominate the orb; it frames it, reinforcing the idea that power is meant to be held, not unleashed.

Set into the body of the scepter is a single red sigil. Flat and engraved rather than raised or jeweled, it stands apart from the otherwise muted palette. The mark is widely interpreted as a seal — not of power itself, but of intent. Whether it represents a vow, a boundary, or a reminder is left deliberately unresolved.

The Moonveil Scepter does not behave like a weapon.
Those who approach it expecting dominance find no response.
Those who approach it thoughtfully often report an unsettling clarity — as if the object is less concerned with action, and more interested in decision.

In a world where unchecked power has proven costly, the Moonveil Scepter endures as a ceremonial artifact of balance — a reminder that wisdom, once gathered, must be governed.

Design & Print Notes

The Moonveil Scepter was designed specifically as a fully 3D-printable ceremonial prop, with clean geometry, and no non-printable “visual effects”. It prints in one color, and I recommend leaving it like that and painting it afterwards as I have. I tried coloring it in Bambu Studio, and I had a hard time getting it to print well (plus it wasted a LOT of filament during color swaps), though I am pretty new at using that feature so maybe others will have better luck. 


What I did/used:

I printed this completely from Bambu PLA Matte Charcoal, and painted it using Posca white, Gold, Silver, and Red paint markers (pc-1mm tip).
 

The Moonveil Scepter exists within a larger fantasy world currently in development.

Comment & Rating (2)

(0/1000)

License

This user content is licensed under a Standard Digital File License.

You shall not share, sub-license, sell, rent, host, transfer, or distribute in any way the digital or 3D printed versions of this object, nor any other derivative work of this object in its digital or physical format (including - but not limited to - remixes of this object, and hosting on other digital platforms). The objects may not be used without permission in any way whatsoever in which you charge money, or collect fees.