Search models, users, collections, and posts

Italianate style Victorian era house. HO Scale

Print Profile(1)

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

0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
Designer
21.5 h
11 plates
5.0(1)

Open in Bambu Studio
Boost
116
322
8
18
105
30
Released 

Bill of Materials

Bambu Filaments
Select all
Matte Ivory White (11100) / Refill / 1kg
Matte Ash Gray (11102) / Refill / 1kg
Matte Charcoal (11101) / Refill / 1kg
Matte Dark Green (11501) / Refill / 1kg
List other parts
  • SUNLU PLA, Marble Brick Red x 1:
  • SUNLU PLA, Clear x 1:

Description

This Italianate style Victorian era house, modeled in HO scale, is inspired by an actual house in Homer NY.

Boost Me (for free)

 Support my work with a Boost on MakerWorld!

Membership

Want to support my work or get a commercial license to sell prints of my HO scale models?

Join

 


Documentation (2)

Assembly Guide (1)
Victorian 2.pdf
Other Files (1)
My Hometown Collection.pdf

Comment & Rating (8)

(0/1000)

These models really stand out for the level of design and thought that has gone into them. They print beautifully on my A1 Bambu using PLA, and assembling them has been a genuine pleasure. These were simply enjoyable to put together. Living here in the North of England, just a short drive from Arkwright’s house—the home of Richard Arkwright, inventor of the water frame—it’s hard not to reflect on the history behind it all. His machine for spinning yarn helped make Arkwright’s house one of the birthplaces of the Industrial Revolution, and led to the rise of the cotton mills that once dominated Lancashire, where I grew up. I was surrounded by those factories like the ones I built on my Bambu, and like many others, my grandparents worked in them, often only into their mid-40s as life was short. They were employed at Horrocks and Tulketh Mills in Preston, among others, part of a generation whose lives were deeply tied to the textile industry and the factories that surround us even today.
The designer has replied
0
Reply
Wow, thanks for your thoughtful reply. One of my greatest joys is seeing photos where people have used my models to build up their own HO scale world. You have a truly impressing industrial complex in the works. Creating these models has given me much time to reflect on how life must have been at the turn of the century. Now that I am older I can take the time to look around me and enjoy the detail that was put into these old buildings. They quietly speak of a lifestyle the future generations will never understand. THese buildings will not be around forever.
0
Reply
great print great job
0
Reply
What does HO Scale mean 💡? Thank you!!
The designer has replied
0
Reply
It is 1/87 scale or approximately 3.5mm =1 foot. This is a common scale for a model railroad layout. Many figures and accessories are available in this scale.
0
Reply
Thank you for the files I will try it with your filament
Show original
0
Reply
I love this models
0
Reply
Print Profile
0.2mm layer, 2 walls, 15% infill
0
Reply
No more

License

If you want to use this model commercially, please join my membership.
Join Now
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.