In 2013, a Japanese woman named Yukako heard about e-NABLE, which at the time was little more than a set of open source files for the first 3D printed hand they ever created. Determined to procure a 3D printed prosthetic for her son Seigo, who was missing the fingers on one hand, Yukako set out to have the files printed, but she was unable to find anyone locally who knew anything about 3D printing. She turned to a 3D printing bureau, who printed an expensive but poorly functioning device. Unwilling to stop there, Yukako forged ahead and finally, in 2015, Seigo received a printed hand that allows him to do anything. Read their story at3DPrint.com: http://3dprint.com/117396/e-nable-ja...-printed-hand/