(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

Snapmaker is celebrating its 10th anniversary by giving back to the 3D printing community in a big way. The company announced a $150,000 Snapmaker Innovation Fund that will be used to support open source developers and ambitious makers who volunteer their time creating the software and hardware that have made the Snapmaker U1 a fan favorite. $50,000 has already been committed to developers whose work shapes the ecosystem of the U1 toolchanger: Moonraker, OrcaSlicer, Klipper, Fluidd, Full Spectrum, and Surface Color Stitch."The U1 didn't get here alone — it stood on the shoulders of a community decades in the making," said Blayne Sapelli, Head of Global PR at Snapmaker. "This fund is how we say thank you, and how we keep that movement going. We give back, and the community builds forward — together."Supporting open-source projects is nothing new to Snapmaker. Full Spectrum, a tool that visually mixes layers of color in FDM printing, recently launched as an experimental, open-source project. The designer, Radu (aka Ratdoux), designed it inside OrcaSlicer, using a U1 tool changer as the test bed. Bambu Lab made the tool more user-friendly by inserting a clone of it into Bambu Studio. Snapmaker doubled down by inviting Radu to Shenzhen, China, to chat with their team and then offered him a job to head up its color printing initiative. Full Spectrum, along with a new tool called Surface Color Stitch, will be included in Snapmaker Orca. Sapelli said Full Spectrum will remain open-source, which allows other companies, like Prusa Research’s ColorMix, to share advancements.