
Indiana Jones
by BusyKikiBee
Adventure calls through weathered browns and dusty grays in this iconic portrait of everyone's favorite archaeologist. The fedora casts dramatic shadows across determined features, while a trusty revolver catches subtle highlights against the muted palette. This striking piece captures Indiana Jones in classic action-hero pose, with ancient ruins suggesting countless expeditions into danger and discovery.
View on MakerWorldRequired Filaments4
Bambu Lab Basic Black
#000000PLATD: 0.6Bambu Lab Basic Cocoa Brown
#6F5034PLATD: 0.3Bambu Lab Basic Beige
#E7CEB5PLATD: 8Bambu Lab Matte Ivory White
#FFFFFFPLA MatteTD: 4Why filament details may vary
Filament details (brand, color, and TD value) may not exactly match the designer's original specification. In some cases, the designer didn't specify exact filaments and we've matched the closest options we could find. Always check the original listing for full details.
Some filament links are affiliate links — we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. Learn more
Sign up to track your filament inventory and check your matches.
Create accountYou Might Also Like

Game of Thrones Poster - Hueforge Art
by Lumpy3D

The Boys Poster - Hueforge Art
by Lumpy3D

Family Guy Poster - Hueforge Art
by Lumpy3D

American Dad! Poster - Hueforge Art
by Lumpy3D

Rick and Morty Poster - Hueforge Art
by Lumpy3D

Michael Jackson - Scream Single Cover Hueforge
by Welsh Maker
Recent Articles
View all
What Is HueForge? Guide to 3D Printed Art
HueForge turns any 3D printer into an art tool. Learn how colored filament layers create photorealistic prints and what you need to start.

HueForge Printing for Beginners: Everything You Need to Get Started
Everything you need to start making HueForge prints — what equipment you need, which filament to buy first, how the process works, and common beginner mistakes to avoid.

How to Choose the Right Filament Colors for Your HueForge Model
How to pick filament colors for HueForge prints — tonal value vs hue, building a color stack, substituting colors, and starting with a small versatile palette.