Welcome to the future of tabletop gaming, and if you create some awesome warships from these files, then please share them with me.
Home 3D Printing is hobby that is changing rapidly. The original files were created a time when accessible resin printers were not a thing and the only way to get a miniature quality print was to use a professional printing service.
All of those files did not work well with modern slicer programs and some required some serious work to be printable on home printers. As a result I removed those files at this time. Over the next few years, the plan is to convert the entire Legends of Kalidasia miniature line to 3D Resin prints. As new ships are released in this format, I will add their final STL files to this page.
These files are released under a:
Legends of Kalidasia 3D Models by Kalidasia Media Productions, LLC is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at www.kalidasia.com.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at https://www.kalidasia.com/.
This means, you may download, modify, and create your own 3D prints from the models. However, if you do, you must give my company, Kalidasia Media Productions, LLC(http://ww.kalidasia.com), credit for the original model.
For example, this model by John Smith is based off the Surakari Frigate developed by Kalidasia Media Productions, LLC(http://ww.kalidasia.com)
Any models created from these files may not be sold and you must also release the model under the same type of creative commons license.
As for the files, they were created with the Free and Open source software Blender. Blender can be downloaded at http://www.blender.org/. As for creating 3D prints from these models, those details will depend on the service/machine that you use to create the 3D Prints. Blender can export models into a variety of formats, so please contact your printer for details on what they need. I really can’t help you with this step since there are so many different ways to create 3D Prints.
I would agree that the Tiger Shark is a beautiful machine, but why must efficiency be measured in how quickly we can kill each other?