

Unless you have lots of technical skills and patience i wouldn’t recommend it especially not for a first printer… but something worth considering down the road for the open source aspect would be a voron.
The Voron team has designed a few different printer variations and released the bill of materials and software documentation for you to source all the parts needed to build a printer from the ground up. Companies on Ali express sell kits to make it a little easier and cheaper but again, you are building it from the ground up.
If that sounds interesting I would still highly recommend starting with something a little cheaper like the elegoo CC (1 or 2) to get used to printing and see how much you like it.
Whatever you decide is right for you though I hope you and your wife really enjoy the hobby!





That’s correct. Creality jumped in the game after and took advantage of a lot of the work prusa and the open source community did to make printers much more affordable with the ender series. That drew a lot more people into the community like myself, but nowadays I’d say steer clear of them for a number of reasons.
Bonus history, Naomi Wu is/was a huge maker from China who was able to push development on the cr-30 print mill. The print mill is almost literally just a small tread mill with the gantry on an angle that “shines” in batch printing and theoretically infinitely long parts. From my experience though its even finickier than an old ender and poses some additional design considerations. I think it’s super cool conceptually though and very satisfying to get successful parts off of, but could really only recommend to enthusiasts with lots of time and disposable income.