Vesna revises Celtic terrain sets for one-piece FDM printing
VESNA SCULPTS revised three Celtic terrain sets into one-piece FDM files, cutting joins and cleanup for faster terrain builds and paint-ready projects.

VESNA SCULPTS turned three older Celtic terrain sets into one-piece FDM files on May 20, and the change strips away the glue work, seam filling, and cleanup that can slow a terrain project before primer ever hits the surface. The updated sets are Celtic Stone Huts, Celtic Megalith Burial Mound, and Celtic Burial Mound, and existing owners can download the new files directly from their libraries.
The update matters because it changes the before-and-after experience for filament users. Instead of wrestling with multipart terrain and awkward joins, painters and terrain builders now get a cleaner path to a finished piece that can move straight from printer to prep table. VESNA also pointed readers to assembly photos from the latest FDM test prints, a useful sign that the studio is checking fit and printability rather than simply renaming files and moving on. The post said more sets are coming, and it tied the revision wave to an upcoming June release, keeping the focus on a steady stream of back-catalog improvements alongside new content.

That approach fits what VESNA says about its own line. On its creator profile, the studio says most of its models are designed for resin printers, but larger builds such as buildings and landscape pieces are FDM-ready too. It says the models are built to fit classic 28mm historical miniatures, test-printed on an Elegoo Saturn 3 Ultra, and can be scaled from 80% to 120% without needing new supports. For a terrain collection, that combination is practical: one file can serve multiple table sizes, and the bigger pieces are already aimed at the machines that handle durable scenery best.
VESNA’s current scenery ranges span Dark Ages, High Medieval, XVII-century Low Countries, XVIII-XIX-century North American/ACW, Mediterranean, and classic fantasy, which makes these Celtic revisions feel like part of a wider catalog strategy rather than a one-off fix. In a separate May post, the studio said it does not plan to launch a brand-new FDM-only line right away. Instead, it will keep converting existing models for FDM use, sometimes by making a whole floor one piece or adding flat surfaces to ease printing.

That is the real story here: VESNA is not just adding new terrain, it is sanding down old friction. For FDM users who want sturdy, tabletop-ready scenery without a lot of post-print surgery, those one-piece Celtic sets are the sort of update that turns a project from a chore into a quick win.
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