Month: March 2010

How-To:  Make rigid carbon fiber tubes

How-To: Make rigid carbon fiber tubes

Epoxyworks is a free magazine published biannually, and archived online, by Michigan’s Gougeon Brothers, Inc., who use it to promote their West System brand of epoxy resins, which I have not used and have no stake in, but it’s chock full of tutorials, tips, and techniques for working with composite materials that could probably be “de-branded” and used with whomever’s products you prefer. Shown here are photos from one article that caught my eye (PDF), by J.R. Watson, showing how to form straight and curved rigid composite tubes in carbon fiber, kevlar, fiberglass, or other braided material by laying the composite up over a mold made from split foam pipe insulation. It also covers techniques for joining the finished rigid tubing sections. [Thanks, Alan Dove!]

Fabric Horse Bike Utility Belts

It’s officially spring bike-riding time, and I’m super stoked to be able to cruise around NYC on two speedy wheels, but without a basket or rack, my back usually gets all sweaty from carrying my messenger bag. Well, Philadelphia-based Fabric Horse has a solution with their stylish and functional bike-oriented utility belts, made in the […]

Featured Maker:  Scott Teplin

Featured Maker: Scott Teplin

New York based artist and illustrator Scott Teplin, aka Scott the Drawer, is a professional with an impressive resumé. He’s had solo shows all over New York and Paris, and his work has appeared in The New York Times, The New Yorker, and Keith Smith’s 2004 The Structure of the Visual Book, to name just a few of his many publication credits. His work is in permanent collections at the Smithsonian, SF-MOMA, and Harvard, Stanford, and Yale Universities, again to name just a few. Lately he’s been doing some work for McSweeney’s. This from his Makers Market bio: