G0 and Mirai: same grid, different print angle
G0 and Mirai use the same barefoot grid logic as the other flat-base shoes, but a 45 degree print angle changes the structure and the visible pattern.


A barefoot River shoe with the same grid pattern and base logic as the other flat-bottom models, printed at 45 degrees with the toe pointing down. That orientation makes the structure a little more closed than Tora or G1 and changes how the same slicing pattern appears on the shoe.
G0 and Mirai use the same barefoot grid logic as the other flat-base shoes, but a 45 degree print angle changes the structure and the visible pattern.
The paid custom flow uses one top view of both feet and one side-profile photo of one foot so the shoe geometry can be adjusted manually around a real foot.


A quiet, USB-powered air purifier that just does its job. Cleaner room air from a printed object that actually looks like it belongs on the shelf — no humming appliance, no exposed electronics.

A full-size ice-pack air cooler built from printed parts, a quiet USB fan and a frozen water pack. Freeze the pack overnight, place it inside, and Yuki sends a steady cooler stream across the desk with very low power use.

A polypropylene tap water filter for activated carbon. The flower-like top opens for filling, the body attaches to standard taps, and the bottom grid holds carbon while water passes through. Joined G-code keeps the water path cleaner by reducing micro-stringing.