Tell us about yourself.
We are a family owned and operated Blacksmith shop. My husband and four of our children work alongside us in the shop over hammer and anvil to create a variety of stock and custom items.
What are you presenting at Maker Faire Milwaukee?
We will be doing live demo of several items including how to make a Rubiks Cube Twist.
What inspires you to make?
An early love of this craft and it’s history…. and the excitement of creating something unique.
What tips or advice would you give to someone who wants to become a Maker?
Always take the leap. There is no failure. You succeed or learn. Both of those are a win.
If you could make one thing that would improve the world, what would it be?
All of our products do improve the world 🙂
For more info check out the 2016 profile page for Milwaukee Blacksmith.
We’re happy to announce that the Power Racing Series is back for 2016! If you’re not familiar with the Power Racing Series, it’s a challenge to build an electric vehicle (and race it) for under $500. You start with a kid-sized Power Wheels car that goes about 5mph per hour and you rebuild it into a lean, mean, racing machine capable of carrying one full-sized adult human at speeds up to 25mph! Along the way you’ll have to make decisions about what to spend money on… do you want really good batteries and cheap tires, or a nice motor controller but under-powered motors? It’s all a trade-off, and many times crazy solutions come into play.
While the series and the car building challenge is fun, there’s also some serious engineering involved. Teams typically end up building a new frame, mounting motors, figuring out how steering works, and adding brakes that will pass the brake test for safety. (Don’t worry, while it might sound a little dangerous, safety is taken very seriously, and all cars must pass a tech inspection and a brake test. All drivers must wear helmets, and there is no budget applied to safety items like an emergency stop mechanism that each car is required to have.)
None of the teams take things too seriously out on the track though, and you generally see people smiling and having a good time while doing laps in these tiny vehicles. Jim and Patrick from the Power Racing Series do a great job of calling the races and you pretty much feel like you’re at a big-time auto race. Oh, and the cars tend to break. A lot. New teams often spend as much time in the pits as on the track. We’ve see wheels fall off and roll away, motors break loose from their mounts, and sometimes there’s a stray chain or pool noodle on the track. It’s all good.
We’ll have a full race schedule at Maker Faire Milwaukee, with Saturday featuring qualifying laps and a Moxie skit, followed by two sprint races. (The Moxie skit forces allows teams to show off their cars and drivers in an attempt to impress the crowd for votes. Sometimes slower teams can win just by racking up Moxie points for the weekend.)
On Sunday is a grueling 75 minute Endurance Race. The sprint races are typically less than 20 minutes, but the Endurance pushes these tiny cars to their limits. Often motors overheat, wires catch on fire, and tires blow out. Since many of the teams consist of people who like fixing things, this is all part of the fun.
In the coming weeks we’ll be highlighting some of the teams traveling to Milwaukee to race. Keep an eye on the blog!
Tell us about yourself.
I grew up in Kentucky on a farm. When I was able, I spent all my available time outdoors. Primarily building tree-houses, boats, docks, swings, paintball courts and forts. When I was inside, I was building model airplanes or carving out of wood. Later I began playing musical instruments which funneled my building energy into music creation. I left KY to go to Northland College in Ashland, WI. After a number of jobs post college, I decided to make steps to return to what I always loved, building. What I do now is a synthesis of physical building and making music.
What are you presenting at Maker Faire Milwaukee?
I am presenting the steel instruments I build, under the name Isthmus Instruments. These instruments are a new (of the last decade) steel acoustic instrument. All instruments of this kind, (including their influence, the Caribbean Steel Pan or “Drum”) that exist in the world today have been put “into tune” by a skilled human. The art of tuning steel spans only 50 some years at this point. I have spent the last 4.5 years developing my own process of building these instruments. I didn’t learn from any one particular person or apprentice with anyone. I have had an opportunity to connect with other handpan makers in the world and share information, but even so, 90% of the progress I have made has really just been hours of grinding labor, background research and tons of trial and error.
What inspires you to make?
I am inspired to make the things that fascinate me. If I am impressed by something, I want to learn about it. The best way for me to learn about things is by doing them in some way. Musical instruments fit this category, playing and building. I am also inspired by others and their creations. I love seeing what other people make. I love finding ideas I never would have had otherwise. The experiential journey of making is full of challenging experiences. Sometimes they expose more wonder than certainty however! I think makers get even better at making over time.
What is something you’ve made that you are most proud of, and why?
I am most proud of making musical instruments out of steel at this point. It has been the hardest thing I have ever tried to do. In the aspect of making a unique musical instrument, I have developed many of my own tools in the process. All tools have had multiple revisions themselves. For instruments, I have scrap pile over 50 pieces of steel which is more hours worth of work than I can count at this point.
Why do you consider yourself a Maker?
I actually think that we all, as people, are makers on the most fundamental level. Our very existence requires maintenance. And with our evolutionary advantage of a big brain, we have responded to the maintenance puzzle with creativity. What might distinguish one group of people as “Makers”? I think makers are the people who are willing to draw up their dream on a napkin, make up all the ways to get there, and in that process, re-draw that napkin picture ten times over. And just never stop that process, on a project small or large.
What tips or advice would you give to someone who wants to become a Maker?
Don’t wait to do what interests you. Most often making something new is not smooth or pretty. And you will probably have alot of failures along the way. But you might find your strengths and weaknesses along the way as well. And you will get better with time at the whole process.
Tell us about one of your failed projects.
I wanted to make my hand drill stationary in lateral and rotational movement when cutting holes in a steel surface. The wrong position of the blade could lead to binding, which felt like a potential threat to my wrist health. I modeled a press design after other stationary press versions I had seen, but mine needed to be MUCH bigger… When I put everything together, I realized I would need much more design stability, better materials & consistency to eliminate movement. I took the failed design down and re purposed the pieces for a rolling welding table out of other odds and ends. I lovingly call that failure design, franken-table.
For more info check out the 2016 profile page for Isthmus Instruments.
Our friends at American Science & Surplus will be hosting a Mini Nerdy Derby on Saturday, August 20, 2016 from 11am to 3pm, and we’ll be there to help!
What is a Nerdy Derby? It’s like the Pinewood Derby, except instead of showing up with your car already built, we provide all the tools and materials to build a car, decorate it, and race it down the track. (There is a $2 fee per car to cover the cost of materials.)
All participants are winners in our eyes and get to keep their cars, but the fastest running car will receive a $25 gift certificate from American Science & Surplus. Second and third place will each receive a $10 gift certificate from American Science & Surplus.
American Science & Surplus is located at 6901 W Oklahoma Ave, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53219. There’s no registration needed, just show up and have a good time!
Check out the Facebook event, maybe some of your friends will be there! And if you can’t make it, then make plans to attend Maker Faire Milwaukee, where we’ll be running the LARGE Nerdy Derby track. Same cars, same fun, bigger track!
Big thanks to our friends at Milwaukee Makerspace for co-hosting this Mini Nerdy Derby event, and to Coex 3D Printing Filaments for the 3D printed derby car wheels.
The Call for Makers has been extended, and we’re still adding plenty of Makers to the web site. Check out the list of Makers for 2016 so far. (More are being added daily!)
We’re excited to see the return of some awesome Makers from last year (many with new projects) and we’ve been welcoming a lot of first-time Makers to the event. Keep an eye on the blog for some “Meet the Makers” posts soon.
If you haven’t submitted an application yet, there’s still time and space! We’ll have the Call for Makers open until September 1, 2016. We’re also still looking for Speakers, Workshops, and teams to compete in the Power Racing Series. (We’re holding off on accepting Commercial Makers right now, but may open the application process again depending on space allocation.)
We’ve been seeing some great submissions come through the Call for Makers and we’re closing the call for Commercial Makers today, but we’ve decided to extend the call for Makers (those just showing and sharing, but not selling.) If you’re a Maker, either an individual, or part of a group, and you want to show off your project(s) at Maker Faire Milwaukee, you can still apply!
We’ll keep the Call for Makers open until September 1, 2016, though if we fill up every space we have it may close sooner, so if you know an awesome maker, speaker, or workshop leader, tell them to submit an application as soon as they can (even if their project isn’t done.)
The GE Design & Build Challenge is coming back to Maker Faire Milwaukee again in 2016 for its 3rd iteration. Sponsored by GE Healthcare, last year’s Challenge gave teams of four Makers three hours to build a machine to deliver a ‘brain’ for transplant through the Maker Faire Hospital. With no prior knowledge of what the challenge would be, and using only materials available from a well-supplied Hack Rack, teams designed, assembled, and tested their transporters in front of the Maker Faire crowd and raced through the course.
The technical centerpiece of last year’s challenge was the ‘Brain’ which was designed and built by a team of Engineers and Industrial Designers at GE Healthcare. The Brain itself was 3D printed using ABS plastic, and it was suspended in an acrylic jar. Embedded inside the Brain was a NI myRIO FPGA controller from National Instruments, which read data from a 3-axis accelerometer and transmitted it back to 3 desktop computers through WiFi. Those computers could then display the data in real time, so the crowd could see the bumps and drops as the teams moved through the course.
The Brain was also fitted with NeoPixel color-changing LEDs to give a visual indication of its life. Rainbow colors were displayed when it was healthy, the lights turned to red when it was getting damaged, and finally turned off when the health dropped to zero. It gave the judges quantifiable measures of how well each team performed, and also let the audience know how well the teams were doing.
Technology will be a factor in this year’s challenge as well. Make sure to stop by the Design & Build Challenge on Sept 24 to see what the teams will be challenged with this year, and if you think you’re up to the Challenge, apply as a team!
Our Call for Makers is open until August 1st, 2016, which gives you about three weeks to apply. But what if your project isn’t done yet? That’s okay, and I’ll explain why…
Making is a process, a journey, if you will, and along that journey you learn things. Maybe you learn a new skill, or you learn why you should have used screws instead of nails, or why hot glue wasn’t the best choice. All of these little details of a project create an experience, and the experience is something you can share at Maker Faire.
Maybe you’ve been working on a project for years, and it’s still not done. Showing it to people, and talking through it may give you new ideas, or the boost of energy you need to complete the project. (Maybe you’ll complete it by next year and bring it back as a finished project!)
Above all, what we’re looking for is people who will come to Maker Faire and share. Share their projects (finished or not) but also share their knowledge, what they learned along the way. Just showing what you’ve got so far can be inspiring to someone who hasn’t even started a project yet.
Don’t wait! Apply to the Call for Makers today!
You may remember Jake Bissen from last year’s Maker Faire Milwaukee. He had the suit of armor he made as a member of Milwaukee Makerspace, and we ended the weekend with him in the armor battling the large Tesla coil. (You remember the post, right?)
Jake is a film student at UWM and his senior project is a film titled “Rook” that he’ll be producing. Besides the suit of armor, Jake has been busy building a camera crane, camera dolly, and other equipment needed for his film. He also plans to use the Kuka industrial robot arm at Milwaukee Makerspace as a camera control system to film himself battling the large Tesla coil again, a practical effect never before seen in a film.
Jake’s idea came about due to something crazy he tried at Maker Faire, and he wants to make it a reality, but he needs some help. If you want to see him succeed, consider supporting his Indiegogo campaign to help fund the film. You can also check out the Facebook page for the film.
Look who showed up at Betty Brinn Children’s Museum this week! It’s our old pal Makey. He wanted to let everyone know that the National Week of Making is coming up, and remind you that Maker Faire Milwaukee takes place September 24 & 25, 2016 at Wisconsin State Fair Park.
If you make something awesome this weekend share it online and use the hashtags #WeekOfMaking and #NationOfMakers so others can be inspired by your creativity.