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Jake — Founder & Market Face

I’m the person you’ll usually find at the stall. I run the printing, the finishing and the market logistics. I’ll always be the tired one carrying the boxes, and I’m happy to chat about what works and what doesn’t.

Why 3D Printing?

I got into 3D printing because I liked making stuff. I never finished my engineering degree, but I always wanted to run a business — and when those two things came together the articulated toys you see now started to make sense. I began with a cheap printer that broke more than it worked, but it was a brilliant learning curve: I picked up the tricks of printing, how to avoid weak joints, and how to get a smooth finish so toys feel right in the hand.

Where Did It Start?


My first proper stall was at Merville House in Newtownabbey — I lived local, packed the car and turned up with what I had. People liked the toys, the chats at markets were great, and over time, they led to better gigs and some brilliant faces I still see today. I don’t design every model myself; I find great files from other makers and trusted sources, then focus on printing them reliably, tweaking things where needed for durability and safety, and hand finishing every piece so it’s ready to play.

We Take Safety Seriously


I take safety and honesty seriously. Too many people do this purely for a quick sale — I want parents and kids to walk away happy with something fun, durable and clearly made with care. We test things in real use, keep the paperwork organisers ask for, and try to be upfront about what each toy is for and how to look after it.

What's The End Goal?


Beyond making good toys, Cyberprint has a simple mission: bring toy manufacturing back to the UK and Northern Ireland, using renewable and eco-friendly materials wherever we can. That means, whenever possible, choosing materials with lower environmental impact, exploring recycled filament options and planning future wooden products that are sustainably sourced. It’s not a marketing line — it’s the reason we’re slowly moving from being just a local 3D printing project to a small maker business that tries to do the right thing locally.

What's The Future Plans?


What started as a general 3D-printing side-project has become a proper focus: Cyberprint Toys is now all about practical, well-made 3D printed toys. Looking ahead I’m planning to broaden the range into wooden toys, jigsaws, busy boards and simple educational pieces — still maker-led, still hands-on, and still happiest when we hear a child laugh at the stall.