The Baleful Baroness Illusion
Print Profile(2)


Bill of Materials
Description
A classic illusion, like those famous ones in theme park haunted houses, where a head seemingly turns to follow you. It's hard to capture how mind blowing it looks in person. Display using the simple instructions at the bottom. Also check out her hubby, the Brooding Baron.
The Haunted Busts
Due to the fantastic reception of The Haunted Lincoln, I'm releasing new models in The Haunted Busts throughout the season. A few community verbatims from that first release…
- “This has got to be my favorite thing I've ever printed by far."
- “This is unbelievable.”
- “Man this is sick!”
See for Yourself
Boost Me (for free)
Each Boost fuels more free designs - THANK YOU!
How to Print
- You can't go wrong with basic white PLA. Alternatively, glow green looks ghostly.
- My filament settings disable the aux fan. If you switch settings, I strongly suggest re-disabling that fan.
- Carefully remove supports. Don't put pressure on the connection between the chin and the base or it may crack.
How to Display
- Concave (hollow) side faces the viewer. Place near head height.
- Best viewed from 8+ feet away where binocular vision becomes less effective.
- Light from underneath for the best effect.
- Direct underlighting is the easiest way to get a great effect, like a holographic projection that stares at you. The base is compatible with the Bambu LED Lamp Kit (see Bill of Materials for link). While it's the most convenient/integrated option, pretty much any light you can put near the bottom will work.
- Upwards-angled lighting from a few feet in front yields a more life-like effect.
- If using glow PLA, it's best to “charge” from directly in front or behind so the glow will be even. That said, I find that the glow models still look best when being actively lit from underneath, rather than when in glow-in-the-dark mode.
If you're wondering how this works, it's because inverting a face's geometry swaps which parts are light / which are dark. Underlighting also swaps light / dark, and this double-reversal makes the figure look like a naturally lit convex face. This geometric interpretation is strengthened by the fact that most humans are hardwired to recognize faces as being convex. When you move, however, the image you see from the inverted face changes differently than how your brain expects a convex face to behave. To reconcile the discrepancy, your brain interprets the figure as turning.
Thank You
A big THANKS to BambuLab's Make My Statue for helping me go from concept to reality!
Membership
You can always print this model for yourself or to gift, for free. Selling prints of the mini version requires a tier 1 or higher membership. Selling prints of the full version requires a tier 2 or higher membership. The allowed sales quantity is specified within each tier's terms.
Boost Me (for free)
Boosts, follows and honest reviews all help me keep releasing free designs. THANK YOU!
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.












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