My quest was simple, or so I thought. It was to 3D print in full color all the items from the original Legend of Zelda.

Here is a remake of the intro from the original Legend of Zelda displaying the items. Great job to the author Justin Berman!

I selected my 3D modeling software, and reviewed the Full Color Sandstone material guidelines. My quest had begun. After hour upon hour, day after day of staring at my computer endlessly clicking and shaping I was about half done. But I couldn’t stop now halfway through. A little break to play the game of my inspiration and then back to work click by click until there it was rendered and ready to 3D print.

When it arrived and I beheld the box, I immediately thought, ok, hope this was worth it. As I began to unwrap, each piece in its 3D brilliance brought back a flood of memories from my childhood of playing the golden game. Each time I had collected each of these items from their various hiding places and dungeons I had wanted to hold them and now finally I could. I held the wooden sword in my hand and I said, this is it, the sword that started it all, the very first sword that we witnessed Link yielding. I was satisfied with the results and was ready to share them with you, my fellow Zelda fans.

The potions (or water of life as they are known in TLoZ game manual) are still a work in progress because 3D printable clear materials are expensive to say the least and translucent ones simply will not do the potions justice. Currently I am working on DIY method to cast a clear bottle around the 3D printed liquid. Stay tuned! For this reason I carry the complete item set and quarter sets with and without the potion liquids. When they are done they will look like this. (minus the wavy rendered glass).

Arrows are too small to be printed in the full color sandstone material and must be printed in other materials. I printed them in a material call Frosted Ultra Detail. This material is a little expensive so I suggest the material White Strong and Flexible Plastic.

I will be painting mine shortly, pictures to come!

Well that’s the whole set all 32 items, and no a fairy is not an item until it is trapped in a bottle.

Because of how 3D printer services calculate price, I have divided the set into various combinations to accommodate any budget. You can also visit my full shop here.

Complete Set

Quarter Sets

Duos / Trios etc.

Singles

Arrows

Potions

I will be blogging about each item individually, discussing the reasons why I designed it the way I did and if it has it origins in another game. On the 25th Anniversary Nintendo released the official timeline in a book called the Hyrule Historia.

It explains how all the games fit together in a split timeline. It’s definitely worth picking up a copy of.

Zelda Timelines

Youtuber EligibleMonster has recently started a video series that will explain the whole timeline game by game with footage from the actual games. His first video was just released!

If you plan on playing Skyward Sword SPOILER ALERT!

If you reading this and have never played the original Legend of Zelda, it’s worth a go. If you’re a fan of Zelda titles and have never played the original, it’s about time. If you played the original and never beat the game (the clues are in the game manual) and need a little help and want to save time. Here is a walkthrough that will help. There now, no one has any excuse not to take the time to play this classic.

I’m also excited that the new Zelda game for the 3DS will take place in the same timeline as the original!

Our adventure with 3D printing and Zelda is just beginning!