Why We Started Probably 3D Printing
It started with a brick.
Not a real one, a 3D model of one. I'd been watching major corporations quietly pull their Pride sponsorships throughout 2025, and I kept thinking about Stonewall. About bricks. About the fact that "the first Pride was a riot" is history, not just a slogan.
So I designed a full-scale masonry brick replica and printed it in rainbow pride flag colors. Then I printed one in trans colors. Then bisexual. Then I realized I wasn't going to stop.
Every brick we print is made with PLA filament, layer by layer, stripe by stripe. The colors don't fade or peel. They're structural. The brick itself is solid enough to feel real in your hand. That was always the point: something tangible. Something you can put on your desk, give to a friend, or set on a shelf where you'll see it every day.
The name came later. "Probably Printing" because at any given moment, a printer is probably running. It's understated on purpose. The work speaks for itself.