Dinara Kasko from Ukraine,is famous for her usage of 3D printing in cake baking, which creates incredible geometric-shaped cakes that resemble contemporary sculptures.
She studied architecture but opted to become a 3D visualize and baker. Her main method in baking uses a 3D printer to make a silicon mold that could then be used to form a cake.
A few months ago, she found inspiration in the ancient art of origami. “I spent a great amount of time folding sheets of paper and learning methods and principles of origami. Inspired by the beauty of lines and patterns of folds, I created a few models using 3Ds max and printed them on a 3D printer,” the pastry chef writes on her Instagram.
“The first fold that I tried to make was the Miura-ori fold, an origami-based scheme devised in 1970 by Japanese astrophysicist Koryo Miura to store solar panels for deployment in space. Firstly, I tried to make a model for my mould out of paper – I tried making it of different sizes, tried out different folding variants, used different kinds of paper, and finished up with 3D modeling softwares.”