How to Make a Mold: Guide to Mold Making for Professionals

Author: Jeremiah

Jun. 23, 2025

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How to Make a Mold: Guide to Mold Making for Professionals

The introduction of molds in the Bronze Age elevated the crude manufacturing processes practiced by our ancestors. Mold-making techniques have been on the rise ever since, as manufacturers using advanced manufacturing techniques such as injection molding, thermoforming, or casting continue to rely on molds to create the majority of plastic, silicone, rubber, composite, and metal parts around you.

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Professional manufacturers as well as hobbyists interested in taking advantage of these processes must understand how the mold-making process works, how they’re used, and how to optimize usage to meet specified throughput requirements. 

This comprehensive guide will provide you with detailed information about getting started with mold making. Insight into different molding processes, choosing the best molding technique, equipment that optimizes the process, and the role of 3D printing will be discussed… and every step of the way, links to complementary in-depth content will be provided to ensure successful molding projects.

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What Are Molds and What Are They Used For?

A variety of manufacturing processes involve the shaping of malleable raw materials using a designed, fixed tool, structure, or frame–known as the mold. In terms of structure, molds have concave shapes (negative mold) or convex shapes (positive mold) designed according to the final design the manufacturer intends to create. 

Molds are crucial to these manufacturing processes, and their main objective is the reproduction of uniform copies of the given design. Materials used in mold making include metals, plastics, ceramics, wood, foam, and more. Once designed and developed using mold-making tools, the mold is fitted into molding equipment and raw materials such as thermoplastics are poured into it or formed around it. Once solidified, the mold imprints its patterns onto the material to form the finished product.

So, what can be made with molds? Just about anything from prototypes to complex end-use parts. Molding techniques are used in manufacturing to create automotive parts, consumer products, packaging, jewelry, medical devices, and more—in fact, it’d be hard to find functional products without a single component that was manufactured with molding techniques.

Manufacturing Processes That Use Molds

Types of Molds

There are many types of molds that can be used as tooling solutions for the manufacturing processes highlighted above. For example, in aluminum casting, approximately seven types of mold exist, including sand casting molds, ceramic molds, and shell molds. Hence, to simplify the classification of the different mold types, the following categorization applies: 

  • One-part molds refer to the simplest types of mold with uniform surfaces across all parts of the object to be molded. Mold designs or objects with one flat surface can also be reproduced using one-part or one-piece molds. Although one-part molds can be made from CAD models, these molds are generally developed from a physical master model. 

  • Two-part molds provide a capable approach to producing molds for more complex designs. A two-part mold is defined as a mold with two separate parts joined together at a parting line, to produce the end product. Each produced part mirrors the different features of both parts of the model design or the master model. Making a two-part mold also usually involves developing both parts of the mold from a master model or CAD model.

  • Multi-part molds are ideal for mold designs with more complex geometries requiring a different approach compared to the process of developing one or two-part molds. Multi-part molds account for the different aspects or features of the model. Hence the completed mold will consist of multiple parts to recreate the different features of the model. 

  • Multi-cavity molds have more than one cavity that’s shaped like the same part, making it possible to manufacture multiple parts per production cycle, thus increasing productivity.

How to Choose a Mold-Making Technique?

What’s the best mold-making technique for a given application? It depends on a couple of important factors, including the desired end-part material, the intended manufacturing process, the geometry of the model, and the production volume. 

A simplified, step-by-step approach to choosing the best technique for your manufacturing project is covered in stages below: 

1. Outline the Development Criteria for Your Project

A manufacturing master plan can help create clear-cut details of what is to be expected from a project, its development timeline, and the available budget. Whether you’re planning to create custom parts or mass-produce thousands of the same item will define what options to pick in the next steps. The development criteria might vary depending on the project, but generally include the design of the part, size, material, quality, required tolerances, timeline, required production volume, cost constraints, etc. 

In product development, the initial document that answers many of these questions is often the product requirements document (PRD), while the bill of materials (BOM) is the comprehensive list of parts, items, assemblies, and other materials required to create a product.

2. Select the Manufacturing Process

The right manufacturing process for a certain part is largely dependent on the development criteria. In some cases, multiple production processes can be used to create any given design. As a rule of thumb, choose the process that can produce the given part with the required quality, at the lowest costs, while fulfilling the rest of the development criteria. The material choice and manufacturing volume are likely the most important factors driving your decision.

For plastic parts, you can read our guide to manufacturing processes for plastics.

3. Select the Mold-Making Technique

Once you settle on the right manufacturing process, the type of mold for the process is also largely defined by the development criteria. While the exact factors are dependent on the manufacturing process, here are some of the most important considerations when choosing a mold-making technique:

  • Design of the part: Try to simplify the design as much as possible and align it with the design rules of the given manufacturing process to be able to choose the technique that can achieve the lowest costs. Simple designs might only require molds that can be created with manual techniques, while complex designs often require multi-part molds and digital manufacturing tools like 3D printers or CNC machining to create. 

  • Production volume: Large-volume production runs require durable molds that can accurately replicate models without wearing out after a few uses. However, fabricating such tools comes with high costs and lead times. For one-off parts and lower volume batches, it might be more efficient to choose cheaper molds that can be created faster, such as sacrificial molds or soft molds that can be discarded when they begin to show signs of irreparable wear.

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  • Quality: Tighter tolerances require more precise molds and tools to create, such as digital manufacturing tools, and need to be more durable to ensure consistent part quality over multiple cycles.

  • Timeline: Producing complex metal molds often takes months through a service provider. If you’re working on a shorter timeline, try to look for alternatives that can shorten the lead time, such as 3D printed rapid tooling.

  • Material: Materials that have a higher melting point or are more abrasive will require molds that are more durable and can create the required volume of parts without degradation.  

How to Make a Mold For Different Manufacturing Processes

This section provides a brief overview of mold-making techniques for different manufacturing processes. Follow our links for in-depth guides and the step-by-step workflow for each process. 

There are two major techniques for mold making—the direct and indirect mold-making processes. The indirect mold-making approach involves developing molds from a physical master model, or pattern. The direct process involves developing a mold directly from the (digital) design, most commonly often using digital manufacturing processes.

Silicone Molds for Casting

Silicone casting is one of the most popular processes that leverage molds. Product developers, engineers, DIY makers, and even chefs all make silicone molds to create one-off or smaller runs of parts from plastics and a variety of other materials. Silicone is a strong choice for mold-making because it can be used to easily create custom designs and the molds themselves are also quite durable, so you can use them repeatedly without fear of breakage. 

Depending on your design, you might need a one-piece or two-piece mold. The processes for making these molds are similar, but it will take a bit longer to create a two-part mold. Use the step-by-step instruction in the video or our practical guide to making silicone molds to create your own molds.

Injection Molds

Molds for injection molding are traditionally made out of metal by CNC machining or electric discharge machining (EDM). These are expensive industrial methods that require specialized equipment, high-end software, and skilled labor. As a result, the production of a metal mold typically takes four to eight weeks and costs anywhere from $2,000 to $100,000+ depending on the shape and the complexity of the part. 

However, there are alternatives to machining molds out of metal. Leveraging in-house 3D printing to fabricate injection molds for prototyping and low-volume production significantly reduces cost and time compared to metal molds, while still producing high-quality and repeatable parts.

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Thermoforming Molds

The molds required for the thermoforming process can be developed using diverse manufacturing processes, including hand sculpting wood, CNC machining plastic, structural foam, fiberglass, engineered composites, or metals, 3D printing polymers, or casting plaster or metal.

Many businesses are turning to stereolithography (SLA) 3D printing to create molds for thermoforming processes, because it offers a fast turnaround time at a low price point, especially for shorter runs, custom parts, and prototype designs. 3D printing also offers unmatched design freedom to create complex and intricate molds. 

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Compression Molding

Depending on the material or charge you will be compression molding, you have several options for creating molds, including die casting, CNC machining, or 3D printing. The key is that your molds need to be able to withstand the compression molding process, so if you are using heat, you will need to create molds that can handle dramatic temperature changes. Molds will also need to be able to withstand the amount of pressure applied during compression.

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Molds for Metal Casting

Though all metal casting techniques share the same core process, there are various methods better suited for different applications. Some of the most common methods include die casting, investment casting, and sand casting. 

Both patterns for indirect mold-making and molds for directly casting metal parts can be made using multiple methods. Read our guide to metal casting for details on each process.

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Get Started With 3D Printing Molds

Combining traditional production techniques like injection molding, thermoforming, or silicone casting with 3D printed molds allows you to bring products to market faster with a more time and cost-efficient manufacturing process. Desktop 3D printing offers businesses a versatile, cost-effective approach to developing master models and molds for both the direct and indirect mold-making processes, entirely in house.

Download our white paper to learn about six mold-making processes that are possible with an in-house SLA 3D printer, illustrated with real-life case studies.

For more Sheet Metal Stamping Dieinformation, please contact us. We will provide professional answers.

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