View allAll Photos Tagged MAGNET
I was looking for ideas for magnets and came across these pretty ones. Many of theme are upcycled/recycled that use items that are no longer needed (e.g., game pieces, inside of junk mail security envelopes, business cards, maps, bottle caps, buttons).
Here are the links to the person who created them:
1. Cities You Should Visit Magnet Set, 2. Magnets from recycled game pieces, 3. Altered domino, 4. Scrabble Tile Magnets, 5. Junk mail magnets, 6. Little Pocket Magnet, 7. YoYo Magnets, Arcadia Ocean, 8. clothespinmags 004, 9. 4 Mod Trees, Leaves, Flowers- Bottle Cap Magnets with Organza Bag, 10. upcycled, repurposed business card magnets, 11. Little Lilac Lily Coaster Gift/Desk set, 12. DSCF4081, 13. Fridge magnets, 14. Ladybird magnets, 15. Hemisphere kimono fridge magnets 1, 16. In Progress...
Created with fd's Flickr Toys
instruction sheet receipt recipe
Many fridge magnets and sayings saved!
C:\Users\Bill Crow\Pictures\Other Pictures\Other Images\Fridge magnets
(Project 365 Day 47)
My Astro Boy refrigerator magnet with flashing red lights! Although the battery was almost dead, and I killed it trying to take this picture. :P
Update: See also Astro Boy with lights.
Still trying out new dog breeds for the magnets/keyrings. Will try them with coloured glass eyes next - I do need to make a huskey with blue eyes :)
I was moving a small magnet from my fridge to the entry, to hold an item I didn't want to forget when next I am out. As I pulled it off, I noticed the magnetic bits sticking up in a little pyramidal pile. Couldn't resist getting out my Sony HX100V to get a macro. The area captured is under 3/4" across, and the 'pile' maybe 1/4" high. Cropped. Available light.
For the the weekly Scavenger Hunt at TWTME: Magnet
1 try for the Weekly Scavenger Hunt, but if I get the time, I need to do some more "takes" on this. Not very happy with the DoF here...
This is where the magazine will attach to the shotgun body. The 4 holes will have neodymium magnets installed so they can clamp onto a magnet embedded in the drum
Made from one of those flat freebie magnets that I got in the mail. Rubber stamps, mulberry paper, Pearl Ex, and feather.
YouTube Video showing it in action:
Thingiverse:
www.thingiverse.com/thing:3665886
This is a design for a automatic magnet cleaner. Usually, Zen Magnets should be cleaned often so that ferric and other magnetic particles do not accumulate on the poles of the magnets, destroying their coating. However, done manually this process is tedious and time consuming, especially when you have over 7,000 of them. By making a robot that does it for me, I can sit back and do other things while it cleans.
This specific design cleans 216 magnets at a time (one complete set). It uses and arduino uno, standard 180 degree servo, and a 28BYJ stepper motor and driver. Also, the part that actually cleans the magnets is a piece of steel sheet metal (so the magnets being cleaned will stick to it) and a cut-up piece of microfiber cloth provided by Zen Magnets. On their website you can get 100 of these cloths for 20$ so it is very cheap.
Stats of the machine:
Cycle: 406 seconds
Per Mag: 1.88 seconds for each magnet
Capacity: 216 magnets
input voltage: 5V
The 3D printed parts were designed in Autodesk Fusion 360/Inventor and were printed on a Creality Ender 3.
These are yummy popsicles made with fused perler beads. Flavors from top left, bomb pop, cappuccino blast, raspberry lemonade, and lime sherbet.
These are also for sale here:
6x3-magnet cylinders. 4 cylinders make an extended tetrahedron, which are then packed in a face-centered cubic configuration.
A neodymium magnet (also known as NdFeB, NIB, or Neo magnet), the most widely-used type of rare-earth magnet, is a permanent magnet made from an alloy of neodymium, iron, and boron to form the Nd2Fe14B tetragonal crystalline structure.
Magnets cross stitched to original design: black cotton/metallic golden thread on antique cream linen.
Blogged at www.whatdelilahdid.com.