Bruk and Baum are not only bottle shapes. Their print files are part of the design, because the surface quality depends on how the printer moves through the whole object.
Instead of using one generic slicing setup from bottom to top, each bottle is built from three Cura-generated G-code sections. Each section can use different print parameters where the geometry needs them.
Those G-code sections are then manually placed one after another. The point is continuity: the print pattern should feel like one controlled path, not like separate zones with unnecessary interruptions.
That matters because retractions can create stringing. On a decorative object, stringing is ugly. On a water-related object, clean printing becomes more important because loose micro-strings are exactly what you do not want near drinking water.
This is why Bruk and Baum should be understood as toolpath-designed objects. The bottle is the visible object, but the joined G-code workflow is what makes the print cleaner.

Bruk
A simple polypropylene bottle printed from joined Cura G-code sections. Its folding cap becomes the seal: when the cap bends into position, water stops coming out.
View design




