DNA helix dome STL: $2.28, science gift ready
June 28, 2026 · 9:21 AM

DNA helix dome STL: $2.28, science gift ready

A newly published Cults3D DNA helix desk sculpture gives solo DTC sellers a science-gift angle for teachers, students, lab decor, and graduation buyers.

A small science-desk sculpture is today's most actionable print: low material cost, clear buyer groups, and a product photo that already explains the object. The watch-out is print validation. The Cults3D listing was brand new at capture time, with no makes or comments yet, so sellers should run one full test before taking orders.
Today's pick is DNA Helix Desktop Sculpture with Modular Glass Dome Backdrops by dengess, published on Cults3D on June 28, 2026 at 5:35 AM ET. 1 The file costs $2.28, includes 5 files in 3MF and STL formats, and is listed under CULTS CU · No AI. 1

Quick reference

FieldDetails
ModelDNA Helix Desktop Sculpture with Modular Glass Dome Backdrops 1
Designerdengess, a Cults3D Selected Designer with 22 designs on the platform 2
PlatformCults3D 1
CategoryArt / education-science desk decor 1
Files5 printable files, including 3MF and STL formats 1
PartsDNA helix, round base, full flask dome, and half-flask backdrop 1
Assembled sizeAbout 41 × 41 × 119 mm, based on the listed part dimensions 1
LicenseCULTS CU · No AI 1
STL price$2.28 1
Launch signal18 views, 0 likes, 0 downloads, 0 comments, and 0 makes at capture time 1

What you are printing

This is a modular DNA double-helix desk sculpture. The listing describes it as "an elegant and modern desktop sculpture" with a round base that can show the DNA strand in two ways. 1 The differentiator is the enclosure system: one version uses a full transparent flask-style dome, while the other uses a half-flask backdrop. 1
Exploded render showing the DNA helix, round base, half dome, and full dome
Exploded render of the four-part modular assembly: DNA strand, round base, half-flask backdrop, and full flask dome. 1
The size is small enough for batch-friendly desk decor rather than a large display object. The listed part dimensions are 30.2 × 30.1 × 97.9 mm for the DNA helix, 40.4 × 40.4 × 4.2 mm for the base, 40.7 × 40.5 × 117 mm for the full flask dome, and 40.7 × 20.4 × 117 mm for the half-flask backdrop. 1
That part split helps production. A seller can print the DNA strand in a metallic silk PLA, keep the base matte, and choose whether to include one backdrop or both as a higher-priced variant. The modularity also gives the listing a better product-photo story than a plain DNA helix standing on a base.

The designer recommends Silk PLA in gold, copper, or bronze for the DNA helix; matte black, another color, or marble PLA for the base; and transparent PETG or clear SLA resin for the domes. 1 The listing also says the full flask dome should be printed in vase mode, the DNA helix may need minimal support, and the base and domes do not require support. 1
ParameterRecommended setup
DNA materialSilk PLA in gold, copper, or bronze 1
Base materialMatte black PLA or marble PLA 1
Dome materialTransparent PETG for FDM, or clear SLA resin if you sell resin-finished variants 1
Layer heightStart at 0.12 mm for the helix detail and 0.2 mm for the base and dome prototypes; this is a production estimate based on the listed geometry 1
SupportsMinimal support may be needed for the DNA helix; base and domes are listed as support-free 1
Dome modeFull flask dome in vase mode 1
Estimated print timeAbout 10.5–11.5 hours for the full set with both domes; about 9–10 hours with one dome, based on the model dimensions and recommended settings 1
Estimated filament costAbout $1.94 for a full set, before failed prints, electricity, packaging, fees, and labor; this estimate depends on local filament pricing 1
DifficultyBeginner-intermediate: the individual pieces are small, but the clear dome finish and base fit should be test-printed before sale 1
Start with one SKU: gold Silk PLA helix, matte black base, and clear PETG full dome. That combination is easiest for buyers to read in thumbnail form. Add copper or bronze only after the first photos are done, because three metallic options can slow listing work without adding much early demand data.
The main risk is the transparent dome. Vase-mode PETG can look good, but seam control, cooling, and layer haze will decide whether the finished product reads as a glass-dome sculpture or as a cloudy tube. Run a dome-only test first, then test the snap-fit base before printing multiple helixes.

Why it can sell

The buyer groups are specific: STEM teachers, biology students, medical or nursing students, biotech workers, lab-decor buyers, science fair organizers, and graduation-gift shoppers for biology, chemistry, or pre-med students. 1 That gives the product more search intent than a generic abstract sculpture.
The market reference is useful but not perfect. Etsy search results for DNA helix sculptures showed prices from $6.75 to $31.61, while common basic DNA desk statues clustered around $9.95–$9.99 in the captured comparison set. 3 A 3D-printed DNA model listing from TheMonsterCorner also confirms that DNA helix desk sculptures already have a marketplace category, even without this model's dome format. 4
The dome is the pricing lever. A plain DNA helix competes with inexpensive science desk models, but a transparent cover and swappable backdrop make the object feel closer to a small lab-display gift. A reasonable test listing is $24.99 for one finished sculpture with the full dome, plus a higher-priced option that includes both the full dome and the half-flask backdrop.
Do not overstate the license. The model is listed under CULTS CU · No AI, but sellers should read the license page and the Cults3D listing before selling finished prints. 1 The source data confirms the license label; it does not replace a seller's own compliance check.

Seller decision

Print this if your shop already sells desk decor, science gifts, teacher gifts, graduation gifts, or small premium collectibles. Skip it if you need a proven model with makes, reviews, and visible community print photos. At capture time, the Cults3D page showed 0 makes and 0 comments, so the first seller advantage comes with first-printer risk. 1
For listing copy, lead with the buyer use case: "DNA helix desk sculpture," "biology teacher gift," "STEM graduation gift," and "lab desk decor" are clearer than "3D printed science model." Photograph the gold version under the clear dome first, then show the exploded modular parts as the second image so buyers understand why the piece costs more than a basic helix.

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