Aleph Objects, the Loveland 3D printer manufacturer that laid off most of its workers last month because of cash-flow problems, has found a buyer, the company announced Friday afternoon.

Grant Flaharty, CEO of Aleph Objects and who will continue in that role, said Fargo Additive Manufacturing Equipment 3D, or FAME 3D, acquired the assets of Aleph Objects in a deal that was completed Friday.

“They plan on moving forward with the LulzBot brand of printers,” he said in an interview Friday evening. “They will begin production this coming week in Loveland.”

On Oct. 11, the company announced that it had laid off 91 of its 113 employees. Flaharty said Friday that some of those employees would be hired back, but he didn’t know how many yet.

“This just happened,” he said. “Those are discussions that will be going on over the weekend — how many they will bring back, how many of the products they’ll make.”

He said FAME 3D, based in Fargo, N.D., is a limited-liability corporation set up by a venture capitalist to buy the assets of Aleph Objects.

“LulzBot is one of the core leaders in the desktop 3D printing industry,” Flaharty said in a release. “Now with solid financial backing, we can continue with cutting-edge innovation, high-quality, long-lasting printers and product advancements aimed at providing industry-leading solutions.”

Jeff Moe, who founded Aleph Objects in January 2011, was the majority owner of the company, Flaharty said.

“I’m helping with the transition through the end of the year,” Moe said Friday evening. “I’m glad that we found a very good buyer. It’s in capable hands.”

After handing off his company, he will be able to devote more energy to Fork Sand Inc., the computer-security startup he founded a couple of years ago, he said.

Moe hired Flaharty in 2018 to help grow the company, and Aleph Objects announced several new releases earlier this year.

But delays in product launches and expected payments that the company hadn’t received caused the severe cash-flow problems that led to the layoffs, Moe said last month.

At the time, he said the company still had $5 million in finished goods and raw materials, but only a few people left in each department.

“There was limited production going on,” Flaharty said Friday.

Aleph Objects is facing a class-action lawsuit filed Oct. 14 by former employee Zachary Hergenreder, who was laid off Oct. 11. His suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Denver, alleges that the company violated the WARN Act, which requires companies with more than 100 employees to provide notice to employees who will be laid off 60 days before termination.