other uses for red thread

inspiration — tom on April 28, 2008 at 11:07 pm

This is great. Artist and photographer Nina Katchadourian patches spiderwebs.

“uninvited collaborations”

early thesis outline, alienation prosthetic update

documentation,parts,planning — tom on April 28, 2008 at 2:37 pm

Over the weekend, I put together an early outline for the kinds of things I want to cover in my thesis paper. It needs another revision, and will undoubtedly be edited down for scope as I work. In this case, I tend to go too large in what I want to address in my work, and will probably want to focus more literally on the projects and interactions that I am building rather than writing a research paper in and of itself. There’s time for that stuff later. The outline is here.

After re-stringing the anxiety prosthesis, i worked on making an PCB design for the body component of the alienation prosthesis. I wanted something pocket sized so that you could keep it with you at all times. I figured a key chain would be a nice object to make, so I kept it pretty small. This design measures in at a little over 2 inches by 1 inch and maybe a half inch thick. It’ll use a flat lithium polymer battery to give power, and has a tiny switch so that it can work during a presentation and not be out of juice. For today, I’m working on a final debug of the electronics in the alienation prosthesis, and in the evening I’ll be moving into making a final prototype of the insecurity prosthesis.

   

final in-class presentation

documentation — tom on April 23, 2008 at 1:47 pm

Here is the presentation I gave today (10.4 MB).

It was pretty okay, I got some really good comments from Nancy Hechinger about how to frame my work and clarify definition. Useful… exactly what I needed to hear before moving into the final framing of my work before the presentation before the thesis committee.

anxiety prosthesis–basically completed

final,object,parts,sketch — tom on April 23, 2008 at 1:32 pm

the last couple of days I have been working really hard to try to finish the anxiety prosthesis in time for my presentation in class today. Here’s link dump of my progress. Generally, I put it all together, moving from sewing the two pieces together to screwing them together, adding grommets to route the bunches of thread that will control the hackles into, replacing the pulleys with very tall eyelets, and making eyelets that will route the thread over the shoulders into the grommet holes. Overall, it’s been pretty successful, but needs some fine tuning to have it work well while being worn. I like the action and motion a lot though. Video is coming.

Bonus shot of me testing the fit in the bathroom.

  

  

  

alienation prosthesis

final,object,parts,sketch — tom on April 19, 2008 at 10:53 pm

finished the sewing up of the boxes. took some glamour shots. The next step is to make a pocket-sized controller for the xbee and then it’s done! whew!

(besides calibrating and testing the lighting and stuff like that, but i want to have my little victories)

  

  

  

alienation prosthesis–sewing, anxiety prosthesis–pulleys

object,parts,techniques — tom on April 17, 2008 at 6:44 pm

Today felt pretty good. I cast a new, thin layer of silicone for the top of the alienation boxes and sewed it on. Then I put together a bunch of the pulley wheels and attached them to the back of the anxiety prosthesis.

    

    

alienation prosthesis–boxtop stitching

object,parts,techniques — tom on April 15, 2008 at 8:30 pm

I took a break from the anxiety prosthesis to try stitching up the boxtops for the alienation prosthesis today. It’s pretty tough. I have a decent stitch going, but the thickness of the silicone makes it hard to do around all of the sides. Spending like 6 hours for one side of one box in the end is not very encouraging. I’m thinking of making new, thinner casts for the boxtops.

    

anxiety prosthesis–construction I

object,parts,techniques — tom on April 14, 2008 at 9:16 pm

Today I finished sharpening the tool to cut out the shapes for the anxiety prosthesis. I got a whetstone, and went to town. I have a newfound respect for the skills necessary to do that kind of thing–keeping the blade straight enough to sharpen over the course of maybe a hundred strokes while trying to ensure that the blade isnt curving or getting any part of the edge off of the surface is tough.

In any case, I punched out the hackles and trimmed them off with an xacto knife. Now I’m in the middle of assembling the hardware to eventually control them. As usual, here are some pictures:

    

     

anxiety prosthesis–skin demold #2

object,parts,techniques — tom on April 12, 2008 at 8:55 pm

Today I demolded the skin from the second round of painting on silicone to the plaster cast. Here are some photos of the first result and some in progress shots of the second.

    

     

I also got some aluminum and made a tool for cutting out the hackles from the second skin, and marked approximately the layout of where they will go on the silicone.

    

     

anxiety prosthesis–skin demold #1

object,parts,techniques — tom on April 10, 2008 at 8:14 pm

Over the last two days, I’ve been working on making the silicone layer that will form the outer layers of the anxiety prosthesis. Operating on the excellent advice of Evrim Sahin, I brushed layers of silicone onto the plaster cast of the mannequin’s torso that I made earlier. It was kind of slow, messy, harrowing going. I wasn’t sure if the result would be very worthwhile, as every layer that I added on made weird looking ridges and drips in the silicone. Ultimately, after about 4 or so layers, I peeled it off of the mannequin and was astonished at the pretty decent quality of the casting. The part of it that was against the plaster ended up with a really nice, fleshlike texture, if a little bit problematic in places.

What I am going to do now is take the plaster cast, make another layer of plaster bandages as smooth as I can in order to make a somewhat larger and somewhat more consistent outer layer of silicone. I need two layers of silicone because one will be the base and another will be the layer that the hackles will be cut from. At this point, I’m really optimistic about how this piece will turn out.

   

   

   

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