by Andreana Papantoniou and Antigoni Anna Anastasopoulou Our intention was to create a form which takes advantage of the special potentials that 3D printing and milling machine offer. So, we chose to work with globular and curviform solids which are difficult to handle with, in a handmade model. The final brick has a “cheese like” form which came up mainly from a free use of sphere solids. We considered important to use solids and commands to edit them, so that we finally have a unified solid that the milling machine can recognize. Thus, we designed several solids and we abstract them from the brick, using mainly the Boolean difference command. In particular, we first defined the limits of the working region in order to conserve the necessary thickness of the external surfaces. Then, we abstract a big part of the internal solid using the ellipse solid and the Boolean difference command. Using the array command in X, Y and Z axis, we created a framework of tangential circles. We used the centers of these circles and the points of contact between them as centers to create spheres of various radiuses that we finally abstract from the main solid. For the best organization of the design we needed to create different layers to group the objects we used. The concept, which the design and the position of these spheres were based on, was to make the brick pierced and to permit several views through it.