Month: June 2011

Vancouver Mini Maker Faire

Vancouver Mini Maker Faire

Come meet nearly 100 the finest makers the Vancouver, BC area has to offer and see their projects at the first annual Vancouver Mini Maker Faire this Saturday and Sunday 10am-5pm. Hosted by Vancouver Hackspace, we have been fortunate enough to have filled the entire Great Northern Way Campus Centre for Digital Media and with […]

How-To: Hexagon Pillow

I’ve been addicted to English paper piecing with tiny hexagons lately, so I was happy to find this simpler piecing project at the Lark Crafts blog. Guest blogger Cynthia Shaffer uses nice, big hexies, which show off pretty fabric prints well. What a great way to dress up a plain sofa cushion!

How-To: Make a Chore Ribbon

Since Becky reviewed the Silhouette earlier today, I thought I’d share this cool project from The Silhouette Blog. Guest blogger Heather created this lovely “chore ribbon” to help her kids keep track of their household duties. If you don’t have a Silhouette to cut lettering, you could always make something similar with rubber stamp letters […]

Tool Review: Silhouette Electronic Cutter

I recently got my hands on a Silhouette SD electronic cutter. It’s a little computer-controlled craft robot with very sharp teeth! Use it to cut out designs for all sorts of things: paper crafts and scrapbooking, vinyl lettering, glass and metal etching, stencils, and anything else that involves precision cutting of small planar materials. There’s […]

Tool Review: Silhouette Electronic Cutter

Tool Review: Silhouette Electronic Cutter

I recently got my hands on a Silhouette SD electronic cutter. It’s a little computer-controlled craft robot with very sharp teeth! Use it to cut out designs for all sorts of things: paper crafts and scrapbooking, vinyl lettering, glass and metal etching, stencils, and anything else that involves precision cutting of small planar materials. There’s […]

Engineer Guy on Fiber Optics

In this, the last installment of the third series of Bill Hammack’s wildly popular Engineer Guy videos, Bill exposes the wonders of fiber optics. He starts by demonstrating transmission of laser light through a fiber optic stereo cable, then explains total internal reflection with a really cool visual aid made from a bucket of antifreeze. There are details on the manufacture of the fibers themselves, the design of the first transatlantic fiber optic cable, and the signal processing used to encode data for transmission via fiber. All that, and more, in just five minutes and thirty seconds. Nice way to wound out series #3, Bill!