 Hi, I'm Virginia Ingram, and these are my 3D printed laryngeal systems. So I was taking an anatomy and physiology class last semester and I wanted to have a model for studying, and I contacted some of the librarians at UT, and they actually recommended that I talk to Richard about potentially printing something. In my anatomy and physiology class, we had three systems that we were going over. I'm a visual learner, and I thought it would be helpful for me to learn some of the different systems by actually being able to hold them in my hand. If we had a model of the larynge, then we could label it and turn that in for an extra grade, and so I decided that it made sense to 3D print the laryngeal system because I was interested in 3D printing. I needed to do a model, so it just kind of made sense. First and foremost, it was really easy to find them because I had a librarian that recommended Richard to me, but I also, when I was at the library one day, I saw an advertisement. So I just wrote him and I came over and met with him. I told him what I wanted to do. He told me different places I could go to either create a model myself or to find models that already existed that I could purchase and then print from. So Richard helped sort of guide that whole process. We talked about the different files. I would find things and send it to him and he was like really collaborative with me for the different types of things that might work. Then, once I identified one, I sent it over to him. He printed it. It was perfect. It was beautiful and it was, I don't know, it was exactly what I needed, so. Excellent.