Setting: March 2026
Most evenings at dinner lately, the conversation turns to the 3D printer. Not because we need anything, but because we can. Someone throws out an idea and we all build on it from there.
“Caleb, you should print a French horn for your band teacher,” I say.
“Or a whole music staff,” my dad adds.
“Wait. What instrument does she actually play?”
Phones come out. Screens get turned across the table. Someone finds something, passes it over, and the question always follows: “Could you print that?”
At some point, Caleb started keeping a list in the Notes app on his phone. Just a running collection of things to make next.
The funny part is that most of the things on that list already exist. They’re things we could easily buy, usually for a few dollars, and definitely in less time than it takes us to make them.
We’ve already spent hours printing things that fall into that category. A toothbrush holder that took most of the day. Fidget toys. Replacement doll shoes for my mom's collection. Balloon dogs. Small baskets for our book counter numbers. A replacement back cover for a Wii remote we thought was gone for good.
None of it was necessary. None of it was urgent. And all of it took significantly longer than just buying it.
That’s what makes it a little hard to explain.
Why spend hours printing something that already exists? Why wait for it to build, layer by layer, when you could just click “add to cart” and be done with it?
There isn’t really a good answer.
It’s novelty. A little pointless. Completely unnecessary.
And still, every time a print finishes, the boys run upstairs to see it. Sometimes they argue over who gets to scrape it off the build plate.
When we first got the printer, we stood there watching the very first layer go down. Just a thin line of melted plastic slowly tracing its shape. We watched it like it was magic.
Now the house is slowly filling with things that didn’t need to exist. And somehow, that’s not the part that matters.
The part that matters is the moment someone pauses mid-conversation and says, “Wait… what if we printed one?”
And just like that, we’re all leaning in again, turning our screens toward each other, trying to see if we can.
This post is part of my One-Minute Memoir series — short reflections on small moments that still manage to say something big.