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Vinyl Me, Please started in 2013 with a dozen subscribers who were happy to have fellow music junkies send them monthly mailings of great records. In months, VMP had a couple hundred subscribers.
Hephaestus points us to a story about how Amanda Ghassaei, from Instructables, is experimenting with 3D printing vinyl records. As you can see in the video below, she's using a super high-end machine, ...
And the good news is that nowadays, you can build your record player at home, with a basic 3D printer. The vinyl revival inspired a lot of companies and the British startup Frame Theory 3D is one ...
The 3D printed record player project is intended to: – Act as a thought experiment applying modern fabrication techniques to a vintage application. – Be a cool use of 3D Printing ...
Vinyl Me, Please started in 2013 with a dozen subscribers who were happy to have fellow music junkies send them monthly mailings of great records. In months, VMP had a couple hundred subscribers.
Left for dead in the 1980s, vinyl records are now the music industry’s most popular and highest-grossing physical format. Getting them manufactured, however, is increasingly a challenge.
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