Fresh Vase, printed on my Frankenstein delta. (Yes, I know Frank was the scientist and not the monster, but still, you get the idea).
Looks like there’s some occasional mis-extrusion?
No, it’s two passes on the perimeter. That is where it jumps back to the inner one. I’m not sure how to avoid that. Single perimeter is not strong enough. This was sliced with cura with the spiral vase option.
How tall is this beautiful vase?
For those without such printers this would take several hours.
Pragmatic use of lego bricks, I like it 
Looks impressive, I’ve fancied making a delta for a while, are they any more difficult than a Cartesian?
@Richard_Rogers yes imho! Calibration on delta are way harder than on cartesian where one motor does one axis.
You must be extra careful with the arm length and spacing as it may not be possible to fix these easily afterwards. They impact the movement with the slightest error (0.1mm on the length may provoke a convex/concave movement, and difference between arm length provokes a fatal one).
Just call it Frankenstein’s Delta (i.e. add the apostrophe) and you’re there!
Neat.
That is gorgeous. I’m jealous…
BTW, this took 9 hours. I wanted to give each layer enough time to cool down (PLA). The vase is my design, if anyone is interested, I can post it on YouMagine.
Looks great. What did you use to design the model?
Rhino3d.
What is the purpose of the vertical wood pieces? Was this an attempt to add stiffness?
Yes. A successful attempt, but the price is a smaller print bed.
