Parametric design, made physical.
CornerCAD started from a simple frustration: most 3D-printed products are novelties. They look clever for about twenty minutes, then live in a drawer. I wanted to make the opposite — objects that earn their place on a shelf, a desk, or a car, and stay there.
Everything here begins in FreeCAD as a real parametric model — dimensioned, tolerance-checked, and designed to do its job before a printer ever turns on. Then it's made on the right machine for the material: a Creality K2 Plus for functional multi-material prints, an Elegoo Saturn 16K for fine-detail resin work, and a Longer Ray5 laser for engraving wood and slate. One printer forced to do everything is how you get mediocre everything; matching the process to the product is how you get something that lasts.
Automotive parts are one example of that standard in action. Brackets, dash mounts, brake-cooling ducts, and door cards get designed and tested on my own Daytona Coupe before they're offered to anyone else — if a part can't survive heat, vibration, and daily use on a real car, it doesn't ship. But the same rule applies to a vase, a planter, or a set of coasters: it should earn its place and keep it.
Most of what I make is made to order. When you buy something, I build it — so the print is fresh, the finish is current, and I can offer it in the material and color you actually want. It takes a few days longer than pulling stock off a shelf. That's the point.
Questions about a product, a custom project, or an event? Send a note and I'll get back to you.