LOOM writes spiral-vase G-code directly — no STL, no slicer. Because it controls the nozzle path itself, it can draw textures a slicer can't: stitch loops, waves and columns are modulations of the toolpath, not the mesh.
Choose a ready-made profile (bed size, start/end G-code, temperatures are set for you) or + Custom to enter your own bed size and start/end G-code. Then pick the nozzle you actually have installed.
The silhouette editor is the vase seen from the side: bottom of the canvas is the build plate, the right edge is Max diameter. Drag points, click the curve to add one, double-click to remove. Presets give you a starting shape.
Try the one-click looks first, then fine-tune. Stitches are the signature: the nozzle loops outward in mid-air on each pass and the loops stack into a knitted / chain-mail surface. Spacing sets how many stitches per revolution, Bundle stacks several layers on the same loop for chunkier knits, Layer offset staggers them (0.5 = brick pattern). Flow modulation reduces extrusion at the loop peak so it stays crisp. The ◇ Shuffle button rolls a whole new design.
Distort warps the whole wall: Warp is an organic noise field (seamless around the vase), Spots scatters bumps — or dents, with a negative amount — all around the surface. Texture area limits where the surface texture appears: a horizontal band, a diagonal sash wrapping the vase, or noise-grown patches for irregular zones. Edge softness feathers the boundary.
In Floor & Mount, switch the mount to E27 PENDANT: the floor is printed with a reinforced socket hole (default Ø 40 mm). Print it like a vase, then flip it — the floor becomes the top of the shade. Unscrew the ring of a standard E27 pendant lamp-holder, put the threaded neck through the hole, screw the ring back to clamp the print. Use ≥ 3 floor layers, and prefer an LED bulb (low heat) with PLA.
Check the stats bar (filament, weight, time), then Download .gcode and print it like any sliced file (SD card / USB / your printer's upload page). On Bambu printers, drop the file into Bambu Studio's device tab or the SD card. Always watch the first layers of a G-code you didn't slice yourself.