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Napoleonic Drummer Soldier – Cults3D historical miniature | DTC 3D Print Pick (May 23)
Today's pick is Soldat de l'empire no 94 — a 78mm Napoleonic naval drummer miniature uploaded to Cults3D on May 22, 2026 by picolorigolo (CC BY-SA, commercial use permitted). The only commercially-licensed new upload in the May 22–23 window. Wargaming/miniature painter Etsy niche supports $15–$22 unpainted and $38–$80 painted display figures; ~78–81% gross margin on unpainted units. Full print settings, filament guidance, buyer persona analysis, and an honest assessment of the pick's early-stage engagement signals inside.

Today's pick is a narrow one. The May 22–23 upload window was sparse across all three source platforms, and only one model in it carries a confirmed commercial-use license. That model is Soldat de l'empire no 94: le tambour des marins de la garde consulaire 1803 — a 78mm Napoleonic naval drummer miniature published on Cults3D on May 22, 2026 by designer picolorigolo.1
Engagement numbers are low — 61 views, 0 likes, 6 downloads as of publication.1 That's a real flag. But the license is clean CC BY-SA (attribution + share-alike, commercial use permitted), the designer has a proven 9.5k-download catalog of historical military figures, and the wargaming miniature market on Etsy moves at price points that make this worth evaluating seriously.
What it is
Soldat de l'empire no 94 is a single-part STL depicting the tambour (drummer) of the marins de la garde consulaire — the naval infantry unit of Napoleon Bonaparte's Consular Guard as it stood in 1803.1
The figure measures 39.7 × 39.7 × 78.4 mm. It's part of a numbered series that runs at least 94 entries deep — all released free by picolorigolo — covering Napoleon I himself, grenadiers on horseback, Polish lancers, and various guard infantry units.1 picolorigolo holds Cults3D's Designer, Popular, and Influencer badges and has accumulated 9.5k total downloads across 156 models — this is not a first attempt.1
The same model was also posted to Thingiverse on April 30, 2026.1 The Cults3D upload is May 22 — that puts it squarely in today's window.
License
CC BY-SA 4.0 — commercial use is permitted. Two obligations attach:1
- Attribution: you must credit picolorigolo as the designer. On Etsy, a line in your listing description ("Model design by picolorigolo / Cults3D") satisfies this — no front-of-listing placement required.
- Share-alike: if you create and publish derivative digital files (a remixed STL, for example), those derivatives must also carry CC BY-SA. Selling a painted physical print is not a derivative work — it's a physical object. The share-alike clause does not prevent you from selling painted prints without releasing your paint scheme.
No Patreon subscription required. No per-unit fees. The license is perpetual, not month-to-month.
Print settings
Single STL, single piece. No assembly required.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Layer height | 0.10–0.12 mm (recommended for detail preservation) |
| Infill | 15–20% |
| Supports | Likely required — the drum geometry and hat brim create overhangs typical of upright figurine designs (support placement should be verified in your slicer) |
| Support type | Tree supports (minimize contact with surface details) |
| Material | PLA or PLA+ |
| Bed adhesion | Brim recommended (narrow base) |
| Print time estimate | 3–5 hours at 0.10 mm layer height |
| Difficulty | Intermediate (support removal around small details requires care) |
| Post-processing | Recommended: light sanding on support contact points before priming |
The 78mm scale is standard for collector display figures and compatible with most historical miniature painting conventions. It's taller than 28mm/32mm tabletop wargame scale, which means more surface area to paint but also less demand for microscopic precision — a trade-off that makes this accessible to intermediate painters.
Filament suggestions
Paint adhesion is what drives this pick, not color. Print in a neutral base that accepts primer well.
- Grey or off-white PLA/PLA+: best prep for a painted finish — primer goes on evenly without fighting the filament color
- Matte PLA: preferred over silk or satin finishes; smooth sheen from silk PLA requires more primer coats before paint
- Avoid PETG for this application: PETG is harder to sand and adhesion for hobby acrylics is less reliable
If you plan to sell unpainted, grey or stone-white gives the buyer clear layer-line visibility — a positive for buyers who want to see they're getting a physical printed object, not a cast resin replica.
Who buys this
The buyer is not a casual Etsy shopper. This is a niche product with a clearly defined audience:
Historical wargame and miniature painters — communities like r/minipainting and r/warhammer (the latter for overlap) are large and active. Napoleonic-era specific buyers cluster around games like Black Powder, Sharp Practice, and La Bataille series. These buyers are already familiar with 28mm–90mm figure formats, they expect to paint what they receive, and they understand the price of a quality cast resin figure runs $8–20 for a single 28mm model. An 80mm display figure in printable form lands differently in this market.
Napoleonic history enthusiasts and collectors — a separate audience from wargamers. These buyers want display-shelf pieces. The consular guard naval drummer is a specific enough subject that a buyer who cares about this unit will have difficulty finding exact alternatives anywhere.
Educators and museum shop buyers — lower volume but real. A French history teacher, a Napoleon-themed event organizer, or a small museum gift shop represents a higher-ticket single-unit sale scenario. This isn't a primary channel but worth noting in listing copy.
For Etsy targeting, lead with the specificity: "1803 Consular Guard naval drummer." Buyers who want this know what they're looking for. Broad "Napoleonic soldier" search terms have more competition; the regimental-specific language attracts buyers willing to pay more for accuracy.
Painted Napoleonic miniatures — the buyer community this pick is made for (Wikimedia Commons, public domain)
Etsy comps and margin
Etsy search for "3D printed Napoleonic miniature" and "Napoleonic soldier figurine" returns a thin but active set of listings. Comparable painted 3D-printed military miniatures (single figures, 60–90mm scale) sell in the $18–$45 range depending on paint quality and seller reputation. Unpainted printed figures at similar scale list at $12–$22.
A conservative cost model for a single unpainted unit, printed at 0.10 mm:
| Cost item | Estimate |
|---|---|
| Filament (~25 g PLA at $0.02/g) | $0.50 |
| Electricity (4 hrs at 150 W, $0.12/kWh) | $0.07 |
| Primer spray (pro-rated, ~$0.30/unit) | $0.30 |
| Packaging (small box, tissue paper) | $0.40 |
| Total per-unit cost (unpainted) | ~$1.27 |
| Etsy fees (~12% of sale + $0.20 listing) | ~$2.00–$2.84 (based on $15–$22 price) |
| Net at $15.00 (unpainted) | ~$11.73 (~78% gross margin, pre-shipping) |
| Net at $22.00 (unpainted) | ~$17.89 (~81% gross margin, pre-shipping) |
All cost estimates above are author estimates; filament cost assumes a $20/kg spool. Etsy fee calculation assumes standard seller account (no Etsy Plus). Shipping not included — 3D-printed figurines at this size typically ship USPS First Class in a small rigid box.
For painted units, add your painting time at your own labor rate. A basic tabletop-quality paint job on a 78mm figure takes 1–3 hours. At $20–$30 of effective labor, a painted unit retailing at $38–$45 still yields a healthy margin once materials and fees are netted. The ceiling is higher if you build a reputation in the miniature painting community — based on comparable painted 28–90mm historical figures on Etsy, display-quality painted pieces regularly list at $55–$80, though sell-through at that range depends heavily on listing photography and the seller's demonstrated paint portfolio.
One constraint to note upfront: this is a single-piece model with no variant files included.1 There are no pre-supported, scaled-up, or paint-guide files. You'll need to add your own supports and decide on scale. picolorigolo's other models in the same series follow the same pattern — single STL, no extras — so this is consistent with the designer's release format.
Honest assessment of this pick
The low engagement numbers (0 likes, 6 downloads since May 22) are worth naming directly. Three explanations are plausible: the model is 23 hours old on Cults3D at time of writing, the historical miniature niche has a smaller casual discovery audience than consumer products, and Cults3D's Serper indexing skews toward fan art over historical military figures. None of these are disqualifying, but they mean you're earlier in the adoption curve than usual.
The broader context: this was the only commercially-licensed model to appear across Cults3D, MakerWorld, and Printables in the May 22–23 window.1 MakerWorld's default license prohibits commercial use on all free models. Printables was inaccessible for license verification. Nine other Cults3D uploads in this window were either fan art of copyrighted IP or explicitly personal-use-only licenses.
This pick is correct for a DTC seller who already has an Etsy presence in the miniature or historical figure category, or who wants to build one. It is not a short-cut impulse product. The margin math is solid; the market is real but requires positioning. If you are looking for a high-volume, no-expertise listing like a keychain or desk organizer — this window did not produce one.
Where to get it
Download: Soldat de l'empire no 94 – Cults3D
License: CC BY-SA 4.0 — commercial use permitted with attribution and share-alike on derivative digital works. Free to download.
Designer: picolorigolo on Cults3D — 156 models, 9.5k downloads, Designer / Popular / Influencer badges.1
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Cover image: AI-generated illustration
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