
Thereโs something about cardboard that inspires creativity in people of all ages.
At Maker Faire Bay Area this year, DIY.org had set the stage for a whole “cardboard village” where kids could put together structures, catapults, armor โฆ basically, anything they could imagine making out of cardboard. I showed up toward the end of the day on Sunday, and a lot of the cardboard structures were starting to get dismantled, but there were still kids hanging out in the rosy afterglow of the cardboard village, like these two, above.
Another exhibitor at Maker Faire Bay Area who harnessed the power of cardboard was Kinetic Creatures, a company started by couple Lucas Ainsworth and Alyssa Hamel. They produce kits for making fun kinetic cardboard animal sculptures. (Inspired by the great kinetic sculptures of Theo Jansen, of course!) Each animal โ rhino, elephant, or giraffe โ comes with a wire crank handle, but it also has room to add on an electric motor and gears to make it walk on its own.


At Maker Faire, Alyssa and Lucas brought a scaled-up, pedal powered version of their Rory the Rhino creature. It was a huge hit. “Hundreds of makers pedal-powered it at the Faire,” they tell me.
Alyssa trying out the giant pedal-powered rhino for the first time:
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