Digital downloads from E‑Stim Emporium: print, learn and track your play
Most people know E‑Stim Emporium for hardware: control boxes, electrodes and the bits that go in or on your body. Sitting quietly alongside that kit is a small but growing set of digital downloads that support your play: 3D-print files for DIY electrodes, a beginner's guide, and a diary template to track your sessions.
They won’t replace a good control box, but they do make it easier to learn, experiment and keep a record of what actually works on your body.
You can see them all here:
https://www.estim-emporium.
1. STL files – print your own electrode bodies
One of the more unusual things in the digital section is a set of STL files for people who want to 3D‑print their own electrode bodies.
Instead of only buying finished pieces, you can:
- Download the STL file for a design.
- Print it yourself in a suitable material using your own 3D printer.
- Combine the printed body with conductive elements, wiring and hardware you source separately.
The files use the same shapes we use in-house for our range: bodies designed around real anatomy and tested geometry, not random objects pulled from a generic model library. That means you’re not starting from scratch with a guess; you’re building on something we’ve already spent time refining.
They’re ideal if you:
- Already have a 3D printer and enjoy tuning settings and materials.
- Want to experiment with colours, finishes or small tweaks without waiting for a new batch from us.
- Live somewhere where shipping finished electrodes is awkward or expensive, but downloading a file is trivial.
The STL files are digital; you’re responsible for using appropriate materials, print settings, and finishing, and for ensuring that anything that comes into contact with skin or enters your body is smooth, clean, and safe. What you get from us is the shape and design, not a full kit of parts.
2. Beginner's guide – a straighter path into e‑stim
If you’re new to electrosex, the beginner's guide is the obvious starting point in the digital range.
This isn’t just a product leaflet turned into a PDF. It’s a structured overview for people curious about e‑stim who want a clear, realistic explanation before they start applying electrodes to themselves.
The guide covers:
- The basics of what e‑stim actually is in a kink context.
- How it typically feels compared to more familiar sensations.
- Core concepts like electrode placement, current paths and how to think about intensity.
- Practical advice on getting started without scaring yourself off in the first five minutes.
It’s written in straightforward language and assumes you’re smart but possibly new to this specific kind of play. The idea is to give you enough understanding to make sound decisions with your first box and electrodes, not to overwhelm you with theory or treat you like a test subject.
Because it’s a digital file, you can keep it on a tablet or phone, or print it out if you prefer paper. And if you come back to e‑stim after a break, it’s there as a quick refresher rather than having to re-learn everything the hard way.
3. E‑stim diary template – track what actually works
Te third piece in the digital collection is a diary template for logging your e‑stim sessions.
It’s easy to forget what you did last week, especially once you start changing placements, power levels and patterns. A diary gives you somewhere to write that down so you can:
- See which combinations of electrode placement, box settings, and duration consistently deliver results.
- Notice patterns over time – for example, which kinds of sessions leave you feeling energised vs drained.
- Record any issues or near‑misses so you can avoid repeating them.
The template is laid out specifically for e‑stim, not as a generic kink journal. It prompts you for the details that actually matter in this kind of play, rather than just asking “how was it?” and leaving you with a blank page.
You can use it digitally or print it and write by hand, whichever feels natural. Over time, it becomes your own reference manual for your body and your kit, based on real sessions rather than guesswork.
Why these digital pieces matter
All three types of downloads do different jobs:
- STL files let you extend and customise your hardware if you’re happy working with a 3D printer.
- The beginner's guide shortens the learning curve and helps you get to enjoyable, safe play faster.
- The diary template turns your experiments into something you can learn from, rather than “that one great session we can’t quite recreate”.
None of them are required to enjoy e‑stim. You can have a very good time with a box, a couple of electrodes and some curiosity. But if you like to understand what you’re doing, tune your gear, and build on your experiences rather than starting from scratch each time, the digital downloads are a simple way to add that layer without buying more hardware.
You’ll find the current set here, and we’ll add more over time as we see clear gaps that are worth filling: