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AM Craft is a technology company.
AM Craft specializes in additive manufacturing services for the aviation industry. It designs and produces 3D-printed, small-batch aircraft interior components. As an EASA Part 21G authorized Production Organization, AM Craft issues EASA Form-1 certificates. It uses industrial polymer 3D printers with certified-grade materials, meeting stringent aerospace requirements, collaborating with EASA Part 21J Design Organizations.
Founded in 2018, headquartered in Riga, Latvia, AM Craft was established from the insight that the aviation sector was poised for transformation through additive manufacturing. Founders recognized the proven flight record of 3D-printed certified parts. This offered a clear opportunity to modernize aerospace production and innovate new component development.
AM Craft serves the aviation industry, concentrating on aircraft cabin interior components. Its vision is to be the key partner for aerospace firms integrating additive manufacturing. By delivering certified, high-performance 3D-printed solutions, AM Craft enables clients to efficiently adopt advanced technologies, streamlining critical interior part development and modernizing aerospace manufacturing.
AM Craft has raised $650K across 1 funding round.
AM Craft has raised $650K in total across 1 funding round.
AM Craft has raised $650K in total across 1 funding round.
AM Craft's investors include Change Ventures, BADideas.fund, Andrius Slimas, Martin Villig.
AM Craft is a technology company specializing in additive manufacturing for the aviation industry, producing EASA Form 1 certified, 3D-printed aircraft interior components on demand.[1][3][4] It serves aircraft operators, maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) providers, and part manufacturers by designing, manufacturing, and delivering small-batch polymer parts using industrial 3D printers with certified materials like ULTEM™ 9085 and Antero™ 800NA.[1][3] The company solves supply chain bottlenecks for cabin interiors by enabling faster, repeatable production of certified parts, reducing lead times compared to traditional methods, and has shown growth through a €600k pre-seed funding round and partnerships expanding 3D printing capabilities in regions like the Middle East.[3][5]
Founded in 2018 and based in Riga, Latvia, AM Craft holds EASA Part 21G authorization as a Production Organization, allowing it to issue certification for its parts, and collaborates with Part 21J design partners for full airworthiness compliance.[1][3][4]
AM Craft was founded in 2018 in Riga, Latvia, as an EASA Part 21G authorized supplier focused on polymer additive manufacturing for aviation.[1][3][4] While specific founder details are not publicly detailed in available sources, the company emerged amid the aviation industry's growing adoption of 3D-printed certified end parts, which have been in use since 2013, particularly by leaders like Airbus.[3] Early traction came from leveraging in-house fleets of eight Stratasys Fortus 450 and F900 printers to meet stringent aerospace requirements, positioning AM Craft to disrupt interior part production.[3] A pivotal moment was securing €600k in pre-seed funding, which supported expansions like enabling Paradigm 3D in the Middle East to produce compliant 3D-printed parts—the first such facility in the region.[5]
(Note: AM Craft is distinct from AmCraft Manufacturing, a U.S.-based firm in sewing/welding for industrial products.[2])
AM Craft rides the wave of additive manufacturing maturation in aviation, where 3D-printed certified parts have flown since 2013 and ecosystems like Airbus's supplier network highlight proven value.[3] Timing is ideal as the industry seeks disruption in new part development for cabin interiors, driven by supply chain pressures, material advancements, and scaled technology.[3] Market forces favoring it include rising demand for on-demand, small-batch production amid global MRO backlogs and sustainability pushes for lighter polymer parts.[1][3] By enabling certified 3D printing in underserved regions like the Middle East, AM Craft influences the ecosystem, lowering barriers for operators and accelerating adoption of digital manufacturing in legacy aviation.[5]
AM Craft is poised to expand its EASA-certified 3D printing footprint, potentially targeting more interior components and global MRO partnerships as aviation rebounds post-pandemic. Trends like AI-optimized designs, broader material certifications, and regulatory streamlining for additive tech will shape its path, amplifying disruption in a market ripe for on-demand parts.[3] Its influence may evolve from niche supplier to key enabler in aviation's digital transformation, building on funding momentum to capture share in high-growth regions. This positions AM Craft as a vital player solving real supply pain points with precision tech.
AM Craft has raised $650K across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $650K Seed in May 2024.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| May 1, 2024 | $650K Seed | Change Ventures, BADideas.fund | Andrius Slimas, Martin Villig |