The Maker Initiative

WHO
AM I?

When the war started, I realized my 3D printers could do more than print toys. Now, they are a vital tool for manufacturing critical components, supporting the AFU, and saving lives on the front lines. — Artur

The
Mission

To bridge the gap between scarcity and necessity. We use agile 3D printing technology to manufacture critical humanitarian aid parts on-demand, directly where they are needed most. By decentralizing production, we reduce wait times from weeks to hours, ensuring help arrives before it's too late.

The
Transition

I am a maker turned humanitarian. Before, my workshop was a place of curiosity and play. Now, it is a factory of necessity. The humming of motors that once signaled a hobby now signals hope.

Every spool of filament is a potential life-saving device or a piece of protective gear. The transition wasn't a choice; it was an imperative.

precision_manufacturing

Localized Production

Printing directly in safe zones to minimize transport risks. We operate with speed and precision, bypassing traditional supply chain bottlenecks.

Current Fleet

BambuLab A1 x 1 Unit
volunteer_activism Direct Action

IMPACT

100% Transparency.
Zero Overhead.

I'm just one student with a machine. I don't have administrative fees. Your money buys plastic. That plastic becomes a tool. That tool saves a life. It's that simple.

$10 1KG PETG FILAMENT
Production: Home Workspace
Output: Life-Saving Essentials

Follow The Journey

I post regular updates and full financial audits on my Instagram to maintain 100% transparency.

Follow @avaewww