Guts!
Don’t be afraid! It’s just expanding foam, a few bits of string, and some red paint.Gothic Nightmare’s page will show you how to make the severed legs twitch, too.
Don’t be afraid! It’s just expanding foam, a few bits of string, and some red paint.Gothic Nightmare’s page will show you how to make the severed legs twitch, too.
Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories, pioneers of the Cylon Jack-O-Lantern, just released a new Larson Scanner kit!
Here’s a really open-ended contest from Instructables: just use an Arduino!
You can make a sewing pattern for anything by covering it with packing tape (after putting a protective layer of plastic bag over it), cutting it off into pieces and tracing onto paper. Instructables user megg shows us how while making a cover for her bike helmet.
Cool post over on Hack-A-Day about corn maze entrepreneur Scott Skelly, shown above with his trusty GPS-enabled riding lawn mower. Scott explains his maize-maze-making process thusly:
A maze starts as nothing more than a large field of corn. The design is created using a computer, then translated into GPS coordinates by fitting it into a field whose outline coordinates were previously captured on foot. Once the field coordinates are reconciled with the map design the data is used in one of two ways; the routes can be made by tilling under a path when the corn is very young, or more commonly it is cut lawn-mower-style when the corn is anywhere from knee-high to full grown. This corn-meets-satellite hack makes for a whole lot of fun!
Jodie of Ric Rac shares a tutorial and pattern for putting together one of these adorable softies in just under an hour. As she mentions, they would be a great offering for Softies for Mirabel!
Fascinated by MIT’s Bokode data tag system, maker Matthew Borgatti decided to recreate the effect at home using easy to find materials.