 You can 3D-print your own snap-fit enclosure for the Momento, Adafruit's all-in-one camera dev board for creating your own fully customizable digital camera. The Momento features an ESP32S3 chip, a 240 x 240-color TFT display, microphone, speaker buzzer, and six user buttons. On the flip side, it's got an OV5640 5-megapixel camera module, an SD card slot, accelerometer, LiPo battery charging over USB-C, and three expansion ports for additional sensors and modules. It comes pre-loaded with software demos. Here we have an onion skinning feature for making time lapses, and you can switch between colored filters with the user buttons. Press the shutter button to snap a picture in your preferred resolution of choice. You can 3D-print our snap-fit enclosure designs in your favorite colored filament to keep it protected. Attach a lanyard to the stylized loops for on-the-go wearability, or add a threaded tripod screw for those locked-down shots. The Momento features native support in CircuitPython with the Pi Camera Library. You can download and install the latest version of CircuitPython. With the built-in tiny USB bootloader, the board loads like a USB storage device, so you can drag and drop a U of 2 file making flashing new firmware nice and easy. Get the Momento and accessories from the Adafruit shop. Links are in the description. The 3D-printed case has two parts that snap-fit together. Start by connecting the battery and place it on the battery outline on the front of the Momento. Place the board into the back half of the enclosure with the display and buttons fitting into the cutouts. Then place the front half over and press them together to snap-fit them shut. You can install a threaded tripod screw adapter to the bottom of the case using a flat, wide tool. We hope this inspires you to check out the Adafruit Momento for making your own camera-based projects.