Christmas is just around the corner, and to celebrate, we’ve prepared an exciting giveaway for our amazing community. Join in and show us your festive creativity!
Giveaway Details
What We’re Looking For
Show us your holiday spirit by creating Christmas-themed projects with your Snapmaker machine!
Project Ideas: Ornaments, holiday cards, decorations, gifts, or any festive creation.
Special Notes:
Don’t worry about perfection! Whether simple or elaborate, the goal is to share the joy and creativity of the season.
Feel free to submit both recent and past holiday projects—we’d love to see them all!
Giveaway Submission Period: December 2 - December 20
How to Join
Create a Christmas-themed project using your Snapmaker machine.
Comment with your project on this giveaway thread.
Special Notes:
Submission Requirements: Be sure to include at least one photo of your project with a brief description.
There’s no limit on the number of submissions—feel free to share as many projects as you like!
If the same project is submitted to Facebook, Forum or Reddit, only one entry will be considered.
How to Win
Submissions will be judged on creativity and holiday spirit by the Snapmaker team.
40 lucky winners will be chosen from both Facebook and Forum.
What You Win
Each winner can choose from one of these prizes.
Each winner can receive prizes up to a maximum value of $100/€100 or 2 SnapDryers.
A SnapDryer (shipping by late January due to batch production).
A $50/€50 Snapmaker Store Voucher.
Event Rules
By submitting your project, you grant Snapmaker the right to use it for marketing and promotional purposes.
Snapmaker reserves the right to the final interpretation of the event rules and prize distribution.
We can’t wait to see your holiday creations! Get creative, share your joy, and let’s make this season even more festive together!
Nativity Scene I found on Thingiverse, I’ve just started using my snapmaker so I am still in the learning phase and just dabbling in infill/slicing/walls/etc . I used a cheap PLA filament that glows in the dark from Amazon and it came out better than I expected. This is gonna make a great gift for my daughters teacher with a card!
While I can’t really take any pictures, I’ve also been using a Snapmaker A250 to teach them how to use the machine for their own holiday gifts. Giving the gift of knowledge is always appreciated.
Sadly, the heatsink fan died in the printing module… So now I’m teaching how to repair the machine. Currently waiting on a new fan that hopefully works.
Made a DC to DC bench power supply, tested with the fan still in the unit… dead.
Hopefully I get the new fan in soon to continue making ornaments and other gifts, otherwise I’ll just have to use Baba. She wont mind the work.
EDIT: Just to toss it in, was the “magic” ornament I did. Glow in the dark PLA with IR laser. From a distance it looks plain white, but when it glows, you can see the engraving clearly.
Christmas Presents are gonna be late this year, got to get used to the rotary + CNC first, but a couple of spinning christmas tree ornaments should tide people over until then…
I’m HexaTrick and I wanted to share with you this model that I designed and printed.
It will become a Christmas gift🎁 for a friend of mine who is passionate about computers💻 and specifically the Nvidia brand. Another one will follow, which I will publish for a console enthusiast.
I decided to model the famous RTX 4090 Founders Edition in this custom clock version.
If you like it, I would love to hear what you think and if you believe it will be an appreciated Christmas gift.
This is the other gift:gift: I mentioned in the last post, for my friend who loves consoles.
It’s a mini console, an Xbox Series X custom clock. It maintains the same proportions as the original but in a smaller version and is completely hollow inside, making it a nice storage box.
I decided to call it ‘Xbox Series ClocX’.
What do you think? Would you also give it as a Christmas gift to a console enthusiast friend?
This is a Christmas themed diorama/music box I made last December. The setting is a videogame store called “Babbage’s” during the Christmas holiday season. This particular store was usually found inside malls during the 90s and early 2000s and was one of my favorite stores to visit as a kid. The diorama has four independently working TVs displaying videogame commercials and gameplay, Christmas lights, store lights, and lo-fi/chillwave music playing in the background.