You might get just as much use out of a laser cutter as a printer, then - again, the fablab should have that, too.
I found the one in Berlin, just 40 minutes away (20 by car), and they have printers and cutters and on-line tutorials for the use of both. That is a nice start, thanks a lot!
On the other hand, Shapeways (linked above) mostly deals with powder printing techniques, for which a Roman dodecahedron would be no problem.
You must have been early adopters. Most 3d printers nowadays are much cheaper than that, and all of the maintenance can be done by a hobbyist-level user.
(and what units is that 12x12x12 print volume?)
Yeah, 3d printers are cool, and all, but laser cutters are seriously underappreciated. I see printers getting used a lot where a cutter is actually the right tool for the job.
Yeah, that’s marginally less volume than my Snapmaker does, and it’s a combo laser-printer-cnc at a quarter of that price.
Oh, laser cutters are totally awesome. I was talking to friends who have one. They bought it to cut wood to make puzzles. But they said, “and once you have the laser cutter, you realize there’s no reason to make plain toast when you can make toast with intricate patterns etched into the surface”.
Inches.
And yes, we got these about 7 years ago.
I’ve dabbled in 3d printing in sometime and went from a Monoprice MiniDelta that I modified to my present printer, a Bambulabs P1P. The P1p was roughly $700 USD. That is a lot of money but the impressive thing about it is that it just works; something I cannot say of any other printer I’ve used.
The slicer software is easy to use and importing .stl files is easy.
as others have mentioned, if you have a library or a maker space near you , go there and learn before you invest in one of your own and if they have classes I would recommend taking a few.