Christmas morning detonated with the kind of raw chaos you’d expect from a Norman Rockwell painting gone feral. My youngest daughter—wide-eyed and brimming with that primal holiday joy—unwrapped her first real makeup kit. A rite of passage, one could argue, or a small box of shimmering capitalism. Either way, she was over the moon.
But the gods are cruel. One careless move, one slip of tiny fingers, and the damned thing plummeted to the floor like Icarus in a glittery nosedive. It cracked. Her face crumpled in despair, and the waterworks commenced—Niagara Falls of youthful disappointment. The Christmas dream teetered on the brink of collapse.
In a fit of paternal desperation and fueled by caffeine, I stormed into the breach. I had no roadmap, no expertise in the alchemy of cosmetics. But YouTube—bless its anarchic soul—became my beacon of hope. I didn’t find a precise manual for saving shattered makeup dreams, but the fragments of advice led me to a grim realization: I needed a press. Not just any press, but a precision-engineered marvel capable of restoring the powdered wreckage to its former glory.
Armed with sheer madness and a 3D printer, I designed a piston and form tailored to the dimensions of this tiny coffin of crushed pigment. The plan? Use alcohol—chemical, not liquid courage—to transform the powdered disaster into a pliable paste. Then, with the zeal of a back-alley apothecary, I loaded my makeshift contraption and pressed down like the fate of Christmas depended on it. Spoiler: it did.
When I was done, the thing looked factory-fresh, a resurrection worthy of a Hallmark movie. My daughter’s tears dried up, replaced by awe and gratitude. Christmas was saved.
The moral? Sometimes, being a parent means you go full Gonzo on the weirdest of problems, armed only with a 3D printer, dumb luck, and blind determination.

But the gods are cruel. One careless move, one slip of tiny fingers, and the damned thing plummeted to the floor like Icarus in a glittery nosedive. It cracked. Her face crumpled in despair, and the waterworks commenced—Niagara Falls of youthful disappointment. The Christmas dream teetered on the brink of collapse.
In a fit of paternal desperation and fueled by caffeine, I stormed into the breach. I had no roadmap, no expertise in the alchemy of cosmetics. But YouTube—bless its anarchic soul—became my beacon of hope. I didn’t find a precise manual for saving shattered makeup dreams, but the fragments of advice led me to a grim realization: I needed a press. Not just any press, but a precision-engineered marvel capable of restoring the powdered wreckage to its former glory.
Armed with sheer madness and a 3D printer, I designed a piston and form tailored to the dimensions of this tiny coffin of crushed pigment. The plan? Use alcohol—chemical, not liquid courage—to transform the powdered disaster into a pliable paste. Then, with the zeal of a back-alley apothecary, I loaded my makeshift contraption and pressed down like the fate of Christmas depended on it. Spoiler: it did.
When I was done, the thing looked factory-fresh, a resurrection worthy of a Hallmark movie. My daughter’s tears dried up, replaced by awe and gratitude. Christmas was saved.
The moral? Sometimes, being a parent means you go full Gonzo on the weirdest of problems, armed only with a 3D printer, dumb luck, and blind determination.
