Size: 18 cm
Bust color: Copper
Plinth color: Gray Marble
A traditional-style bust of Alexander Fleming on a plinth pedestal. The plinth's front has a large name plate.
The bust and plinth are 3d-printed separately in different colors, using environmentally friendly bio-plastic.
Size:
18 cm
Bust color:
Copper
Copper-like color with high sheen
Plinth color:
Gray Marble
Gray marble-like, matte
Text plate:
Alexander Fleming
A plinth pedestal with the text:
Alexander
Fleming
Alexander Fleming was a Scottish bacteriologist best known for his discovery of the antibiotic substance penicillin in 1928, a breakthrough that revolutionized medicine by enabling the treatment of bacterial infections. Born on August 6, 1881, in Lochfield, Scotland, Fleming's work laid the foundation for the development of antibiotics, saving millions of lives worldwide. He spent much of his career at St. Mary's Hospital in London and was knighted in 1944 for his contributions to medicine. In 1945, Fleming was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, alongside Howard Florey and Ernst Boris Chain, who helped develop penicillin into a viable treatment. His discovery marked a paradigm shift in medical science, ushering in the age of antibiotics.
This is a 3d-printed sculpture that we print to your specifications.
Production and shippingWhen placing your order, you are provided an estimated production date. This is the date we expect to have your product(s) printed, packed and ready for shipment.
If we need to move your production date more than five days, we will inform you and you can choose to cancel the order.
ReturnsYou can cancel the order up to the point when production starts. If you cancel the order after production has started, you will be charged a fee of 30% of the price of the products we have started producing.
We inspect all sculptures after printing and will discard and re-print any with defects. With 3d-printing there will always be variations in quality and you need to expect insignificant imperfections that are only visible from close inspection. Read more about 3d-printing for examples of these imperfections. If we have received a sculture with a significant defect, we will of course accept the return and print a replacement.
See also