More computer cord fashion!
Upon seeing the computer wire dress we posted earlier this week, Tamara Adlin wrote in to share her own recycled creation, made for the Haute Trash show in Seattle. More: Recycled computer wire dress
Upon seeing the computer wire dress we posted earlier this week, Tamara Adlin wrote in to share her own recycled creation, made for the Haute Trash show in Seattle. More: Recycled computer wire dress
Check out the special CRAFT Project trunks in Evernote! Crafty recipes, sewing, and recycling projects are available. Works great on iPad, too (and my cat Beatrice approves)!
In 1942, shortly after Pearl Harbor, Roosevelt committed the U.S. economy to the production of 60,000 warplanes that year, and suggested that as many as 185,000 aircraft might be produced by the end of 1943. He turned out to be almost correct. In June 1944, TIME reported 171,257 aircraft produced since Pearl Harbor. In 1942, however, those were Herculean goals, yet to be achieved, and as part of an effort to help Americans understand the task before them, a fleet of 4,500 model airplanes was suspended from the ceiling of Chicago’s Union Station. Once you absorb the spectacle of 4,500 planes, of course, then comes the whammy: That’s only 1/48th of the production goal. The image above is 600 pixels wide. At that scale, if your monitor’s pitch is 72 dpi, an image of all 185,000 planes would be 33 feet wide. [via NOTCOT]
From the MAKE Flickr pool: This excellent “bug” synthesizer created by “noise performer” 23N!. A mini synthesizer (VCO/SLF/Noise) based on the complex sound generator SN76477. Three capacitors and three resistors are used to vary the sounds. The resistors can be replaced by a photoresistor (CdS), a phototransistor or a pot.
Lorajean of Lorajean’s Magazine shares a video tutorial for making these lovely origami boxes from wallpaper scraps. [via Giver’s Log]
Over on BoingBoing Maggie Koerth-Baker interviews Jordan Needham about the underwater fort he and his family built at the bottom of a lake.
Mike Davis built this DC generator from an old lawn edger and a permanent magnet DC motor. He writes: The inspiration behind this generator was to have a way to charge up my battery banks on days when the weather is cloudy and calm, when my solar panels and wind turbine aren’t providing much energy. […]