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Come make your own gadget, robot or wearable art with Arduino at Tam Makers!

 

We hosted a number of maker classes and workshops for adults and teens in our makerspace at Tam High School. During our Arduino 101 classes and ‘You Can Make It’ workshops, participants learned to build new projects using the popular Arduino boards, with guidance from our staff and other community members.

 

Many of our members are experienced makers, who are happy to share what they know. Some of the cool maker projects they built together include a graceful robot spider, an eagle god with creepy eyes, an Arduino-powered garage opener, a Wifi server on a chip, and more.

 

If you are interested in creating your own maker project with the help of others, join our Maker Clubs on Wednesday evenings from 6 to 9pm in the woodshop at Tam High School in Mill Valley.

 

Learn more here:

www.tammakers.org/you-can-make-it/

 

View more photos of You Can Make It:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157670867561896

 

View more photos of Tam Makers:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157660433218276

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

OMG LOL in The New Yorker's 1000 Words section

Plans for a life point tracker for Yu-Gi-Oh

Speed Dial, in the NY White Pages

www.livearchitecture.net

Images document training sessions organized by Live Architecture Network August 2009 at the Institute for Advanced Architecture of Catalunya.

The FabLab is an interactive exhibition and workshop space at the Ars Electronica Center. It is all about design, production processes and tools, reaching from different design software via a laser cutter which cuts and engraves, to a 3-D printer which realizes digital models as physical objects.

Photo showing a result of the laser cutter.

 

credit: Martin Hieslmair

Stills from Dan Eckstein's primarly photo based video interview with me.

 

The full interview is here: vimeo.com/7136290

halftone cut with laser cutter. Made using mathematica

Come make your own gadget, robot or wearable art with Arduino at Tam Makers!

 

We hosted a number of maker classes and workshops for adults and teens in our makerspace at Tam High School. During our Arduino 101 classes and ‘You Can Make It’ workshops, participants learned to build new projects using the popular Arduino boards, with guidance from our staff and other community members.

 

Many of our members are experienced makers, who are happy to share what they know. Some of the cool maker projects they built together include a graceful robot spider, an eagle god with creepy eyes, an Arduino-powered garage opener, a Wifi server on a chip, and more.

 

If you are interested in creating your own maker project with the help of others, join our Maker Clubs on Wednesday evenings from 6 to 9pm in the woodshop at Tam High School in Mill Valley.

 

Learn more here:

www.tammakers.org/you-can-make-it/

 

View more photos of You Can Make It:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157670867561896

 

View more photos of Tam Makers:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157660433218276

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

200mm tall digits. Three layers of foam core and acrylic.

Laser cut nori with the library's logo. How great is that ?!? Inspired by an article we saw about Design NORI - 海野海藻店 - we decided to try laser cutting the library's logo into a sheet of seaweed nori. Here is our first try:

 

beginnings of a giant automata

Laser cut nori with the library's logo. How great is that ?!? Inspired by an article we saw about Design NORI - 海野海藻店 - we decided to try laser cutting the library's logo into a sheet of seaweed nori. Here is our first try:

 

An acrylic enclosure I designed for my BusPirate board and cut on the NYC Resistor laser cutter. Make your own: www.thingiverse.com/thing:19288

Nikolai is working with the rather spartan software for our laser cutter in preparation for cutting a set of acrylic pieces for a Prusa Air 2 3d printer.

 

Effortlessly uploaded by Eye-Fi

Laser cut nori with the library's logo. How great is that ?!? Inspired by an article we saw about Design NORI - 海野海藻店 - we decided to try laser cutting the library's logo into a sheet of seaweed nori. Here is our first try:

 

Custom made Tron light cycle playset and board game. Mostly created on an Epilog laser cutter

I've always been fascinated by the giant (if impractical) airships of the early twentieth century.

 

So when I started designing models to produce on my recently acquired laser cutter, producing a model of LZ 127, the Graf Zeppelin, was an obvious choice.

 

I designed this construction from start to finish using Fusion360 for the modeling and Inkscape for the final layout. Took some time and a bit of head scratching, but the results were worth it. The final model has fifteen bulkheads and sixteen ribs, not an exact replica of the original structure, but it approximates it pretty closely.

 

The length is constrained by the width of my cutter at sixteen inches, but I'm considering ways to build in sections to produce a larger model. Maybe, if I have time. I have a lot of projects going at any one time.

 

This model is available on thingiverse: [www.thingiverse.com/thing:3046675]

 

...or from my page on github:

[brucecooner.github.io/LZ127/LZ127-notes.html]

Laser cut nori with the library's logo. How great is that ?!? Inspired by an article we saw about Design NORI - 海野海藻店 - we decided to try laser cutting the library's logo into a sheet of seaweed nori. Here is our first try:

 

Plans for a life point tracker for Yu-Gi-Oh

2D to 3D 3 week 'seasonal decoration' project.

 

Use the laser cutter, CNC mill or water jet cutter to construct a seasonal decoration which can be reconfigured into at least two different designs/products.

 

A sculpture becomes a hat...(not) Welcome to the group Sam!

Another iteration of the sketchbook.

The graphics, developed externally by Julian Sandoval, utilized the internet to synchronize product development and remote fabrication.

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