All 5 Platonic solids, interlocked. CC BY-SA, free today.

All 5 Platonic solids, interlocked. CC BY-SA, free today.

AlbertPCarpenter dropped all five Holden Platonic radial polylinks on Cults3D today under CC BY-SA — five interlocking-ring geometry sculptures from tetrahedron (4 rings, 1–2h) to icosahedron (30 rings, 6–10h). No supports, PLA, no assembly. STEM gift niche on Etsy: $5–8 per piece, $28–40 boxed set.

3D Printing Picks
2026/6/12 · 22:22
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Five square rings, woven through each other so tightly that none can move — yet none are glued, pinned, or fastened. That's a Holden polylink. AlbertPCarpenter just dropped the complete set of five (one per Platonic solid) on Cults3D this morning, free under CC BY-SA. 1

Quick reference

FieldDetails
ModelThe HOLDEN-PLATONIC RADIAL POLYLINKS (All 5)
DesignerAlbertPCarpenter (455 designs, ~2k downloads)
PlatformCults3D
LicenseCC BY-SA — commercial use allowed with attribution
Files5 STL files (~100 mm per axis each)
CategoryEducation / geometry
PublishedJune 12, 2026
Downloadcults3d.com — free

What you're printing

A Holden radial polylink is a set of square rings arranged so their edges pass through each other at precise angles matching a Platonic solid's symmetry. The result is a rigid-feeling cage that requires no fasteners — the geometry locks itself. Alan Holden described the concept in his 1983 book Orderly Tangles; this file set covers all five possible Platonic cases: 1
Octahedron Holden polylink — 6 square rings interlocked in a multicolor arrangement on a white background, rendered from the Cults3D listing
Octahedron polylink (6 rings) — mid-complexity middle child of the set 1
SolidRingsSTL size (mm)
Tetrahedron4101.5 × 85.0 × 100.0
Octahedron6100.0 × 100.0 × 100.0
Cube6100.0 × 100.0 × 100.0
Dodecahedron12104.7 × 94.0 × 100.0
Icosahedron30106.2 × 101.5 × 100.0
The icosahedron is the wild one — thirty rings locked together into a sphere-like shell that looks structurally impossible until you hold it.
Icosahedron Holden polylink — 30 pentagonal rings interlocked in a rainbow of colors, render
Icosahedron polylink (30 rings) — the most complex piece in the set 1

The listing page carries no print settings. Based on the geometry (open ring frames, no overhangs that project inward, self-supporting structure), these inferred settings are a reasonable starting point:
ParameterRecommended
Layer height0.2 mm
Infill15–20% (rings are mostly solid walls anyway)
SupportsNone required — the frame geometry self-supports
MaterialPLA (stiff, easy to tune, good detail)
Bed adhesionBrim recommended for the tetrahedron (wider footprint)
DifficultyIntermediate — no assembly, but bridging tolerances on the interlocking edges need a well-calibrated printer
Print each STL file as a separate print. Estimated time ranges from 1–2 hours for the tetrahedron up to 6–10 hours for the icosahedron at 0.2 mm. No post-processing beyond support removal (if you add any) — straight off the bed.
Color tip: Print each ring in a different filament color before assembly? These are already-interlocked single-piece prints, so mid-print filament swaps are your main option for multi-color. A manual swap at roughly one-third and two-thirds height gets you a tricolor ring.

Sales angle

The STEM gift niche is real and underserved on Etsy. Search "math gift teacher" or "geometry desk decor" and you'll find painted resin, laser-cut wood, and mass-produced plastic — almost nothing FDM-printed to this precision. That's the gap.
Pricing targets:
  • Tetrahedron (4 rings): $5–8 — fast print, strong visual, low risk
  • Full set of 5 (boxed): $28–40 — anchors the "collector" or "STEM classroom" framing
The dodecahedron and icosahedron are the showpieces; the tetrahedron and cube are the fast movers. List all five individually, bundle the full set, and offer a "teacher's classroom set" of 3× tetrahedra at a slight discount.
Who's buying: math teachers stocking their classrooms, engineering students who want something on their desk, parents shopping for a kid who "likes puzzles," and the occasional person who read Orderly Tangles in college and never forgot it.
License note: CC BY-SA allows commercial sale. You must attribute AlbertPCarpenter and release any derivative works under the same CC BY-SA license. Printing and selling the unmodified STLs is fine. 1
One real caveat: this model dropped today with zero downloads and zero makes. You'll be the first to print it for sale, which means you're also doing the settings calibration work. Budget a test print before you list.

Cover image: AlbertPCarpenter / Cults3D, CC BY-SA

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