Nina Dobrev wearing a custom Zac Posen x GE Additive x Protolabs clear bustier at Met Gala 2019.
3D Printing Tech: Stereolithography
Material: Polycarbonate
Finish: Sanded, clear coated.

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Germany

seen from T1

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Norway

seen from India
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Ukraine
seen from Canada
seen from Canada
seen from Uzbekistan
seen from United States
Nina Dobrev wearing a custom Zac Posen x GE Additive x Protolabs clear bustier at Met Gala 2019.
3D Printing Tech: Stereolithography
Material: Polycarbonate
Finish: Sanded, clear coated.
The global market for Aerospace Additive Manufacturing is projected to reach US$2.5 billion by 2025, driven by increasing investments in the technology by aircraft OEMs and component suppliers. Players in the industry currently operate in a difficult market environment made challenging by factors such as taut economic climate that does not favor resource inefficiencies and wastages, rising competition, financial and budgetary constraints, growing burden of regulatory compliance, threat of disruption posed by digitization and globalization, and challenges in information and operations management. Manufacturers and service providers in the industry feel the competitive heat to innovate engineering and manufacturing processes and optimize supply chain to reduce costs, optimize production cycle and enhance efficiencies. The convergence of myriad disruptive factors is fundamentally changing the structure and competitive dynamics of the aerospace industry, necessitating changes in business models for survival in a rapidly transforming landscape. Additive manufacturing is therefore becoming an enterprise strategy. In this regard, a key advantage of additive manufacturing is the ability to create and produce intricate components and sub-assemblies. It also enables parts consolidation as against the traditional need for several separate components. Additive manufacturing machines therefore have the potential to emerge into a “supply chain in a box” phenomenon, allowing aerospace companies to enjoy supply chain management agility. Read More…
Education and Metal 3D Printing: GE Additive Announces New AEP Cycle, Work with Bosch to Optimize and Redesign Oil Header Last year, GE Additive announced that it would invest $10 million over five years in the educational initiative GE Additive Education Program (AEP).