Garden Lantern Pop Up Card with Integrated Electronics

I have been making chicken tracks around integrating paper electronics with origamic architecture for several years.  This is my first presentable project along that line.

I’ve had a vague idea for a garden lantern OA for quite some time.  The electronics seemed like a solid match for this.  The lantern itself it is a single piece of stock, cut, scored, folded and joined on two edges to make a pop up. It is mounted on two additional flat base layers that incorporate and conceal the electronics.

This uses an integrated switch and has no externally-visible electronic components, which I haven’t seen in any other paper electronics projects elsewhere yet.

The closed card is 11cm by 16cm. The lantern is 4cm square at the base and ~5cm tall when opened.

Watch the video to see the candle flicker effect and, to see it folded flat.

The “ambient nocturnal background sounds” in the video is another one of my multi-track recording experiments.

Special thanks to Natalie Freed whose paper electronics class at HSL shortened my learning curve with the paper electronics stuff. Thanks also to Jie Qi for her inspiring projects and, to the team at Circuit Stickers whose efforts made my project a lot easier.

Hammering a Helical Heart

I made an edited build video for the Helical Heart pop up cards, including an original taiko soundtrack (well, pentatonic xylophone, mokogyo, bowl gong, bells and fish rasp, anyway). This is my first YouTube video and, my first multi-track audio recording.  Let me know what you think and, if you would want to see more stuff like this.

Printmaking

Night by Mary Jane Sibley
Night by Mary Jane Sibley

My Grandmother, Mary Jane Sibley, was an artist, a teacher and, endlessly creative. Her artwork adorned our home, not just hanging on the walls but, also in the details that made our lives elegant far beyond our means.  She and my mother decoupaged ice cream drums into decorative garbage cans, turned tin cans into flower displays, refinished furniture better than new, made foil rubbings of antique ovens into wall art and more.

When I was a child, my Grandmother patiently formulated creative activities that sometimes held my attention for mere minutes but, never stopped bubbling in my brain.  Of these activities, one I remember fondly was silkscreen printing.

My Grandmother was a pioneer in screen printing – back when the screen was really silk (polyester is standard, now), before photo emulsion screens and, before printed t-shirts. She taught me her technique for making her own stencil paper – a process of impregnating drawing paper with paraffin using a hotplate – and, showed me how she modified artwork, transferred and, cut designs.  I remember one holiday visit where I spent most of my free time in her craft room turning traditional Japanese designs into stencils.

Screenprinting Rig
Screenprinting rig my Grandmother made for me when I was a child.

Grandmother put together a basic screen printing kit for me, complete with all the tools, samples and, tape-recorded instructions.

Paper Tigers Hand-Cut Stencil
Logo for Paper Tigers (a paper company in Illinois) silkscreen stencil hand-cut on handmade stencil paper by Mary Jane Sibley.

When photographic processes for creating screens appeared on the scene, my Grandmother was there, mixing her own photo emulsions from their constituent chemicals.  I inherited her stash of those but, am entirely thrilled with newer commercial emulsions that are quicker and easier.

As a pre-teen through to grad school, I had a thriving business producing printed t-shirts from original designs.  In particular, I did quite a few for our aikido dojo.  This led to other experiments such as screen printing flour pastes onto silk for resist dying.

During a college trip to San Francisco, I discovered a Riso Print Gocco printer – a device for making quick and easy (though small) photo screens and pressure printing.  On a later trip to Japan, I found a newer, more sophisticated model that never made it to the USA.

Hand-Cut Celtic Knotwork Stencil
Original Celtic knotwork design stencil hand-cut from handmade stencil paper.

In high school, I had become fascinated with designing interlaced Celtic knotwork patterns. Using the Print Gocco, I was able to do color separations and print some of those designs with excellent registration. This was a bigger deal at the time than it would be now.  All of the artwork and color separations had to be done by hand.  Commonly available computers were not up to the task. Similarly, computer-connected color printers were prohibitively expensive and stunningly mediocre.

One of my Grandmother’s original silkscreen prints, titled Night,  hung in my room for most of my childhood.  When I set up my studio, I re-hung the print there.  Recently, lamenting of the sad state of the matte, I re-framed it.

This got me thinking about all the print making I went on to do, thanks in no small part to my Grandmother’s influence.  I dug out some of the prints I’ve made over the years.  I’m proud of some of these projects.  So, I ran them through the light tent, took a few photos and, set them up as a portfolio here.  I hope you will enjoy looking at them.

The Popup Card Shop is Live

XOXO Popup Card
XOXO Popup Card

I am not sure why I didn’t think to mention it when the new Popup Card Shop went live a couple months ago. It features pretty new photos of all of the commercial cards from Japan and, more relevant for this site, some of my designs, on sale for the fist time. You may remember the first one up from my post here last January on the Golden Spiral card (now available here). I added the quick design I did for the XOXO festival as a Valentine’s Day card in February.

I am slowly working on getting some of my older designs production-ready. So, look for more soon.

I’m also working on refining some production techniques and, on some other experiments. I’ll post more detail on those here eventually.

In the meantime, check out the Popup Card Shop and, let me know what you think!

keyboard.io at HeatSync Labs

I was too absorbed in talking to all the cool people to take many photos but, here are a few random shots from last night’s keyboard.io event!

keyboard.io Road Show in Phoenix!

Greetings Phoenix Friends!

We are organizing the local stop for the Keyboard.io road show supporting their Kickstarter campaign:

http://kck.st/1LboxYO

Kaia and Jesse are building a better keyboard – ergonomic, well-made, durable, programmable, hackable and open source.  This is a very exciting project for those of us who spend a lot of time in front of computers and, strive to keep our bodies healthy.

Come check out their Model 01 prototypes, chat about developing hardware projects, running Kickstarter campaigns and all things maker.

Heatsync Labs
140 W Main St
Mesa, AZ 85201

2 July 2015
7:00 to 9:00 P.M.

Please RSVP so that we have a head count:

  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/meet-the-keyboardio-model-01-phoenix-at-heatsync-labs-tickets-17316214263

See you there!