Originally published in the Santa Cruz Sentinel, June 8, 2012
My new hero is Thomas Thwaites, who built a toaster from scratch in nine months, and wrote a delightful yet weighty little book called “The Toaster Project” about the process. Thwaites begins by purchasing the cheapest toaster he can find (about $6.95) and disassembling it into 404 discrete bits. He then tries to identify the raw materials of the bits, and, without getting into precise chemical analysis, comes up with roughly17 metals, 18 plastics, 2 minerals, and one that’s “just weird.”
My new hero is Thomas Thwaites, who built a toaster from scratch in nine months, and wrote a delightful yet weighty little book called “The Toaster Project” about the process. Thwaites begins by purchasing the cheapest toaster he can find (about $6.95) and disassembling it into 404 discrete bits. He then tries to identify the raw materials of the bits, and, without getting into precise chemical analysis, comes up with roughly17 metals, 18 plastics, 2 minerals, and one that’s “just weird.”
Thwaites’ book is not
an instructional manual per se, but it does get you thinking about the debt you
owe modern technology. Thwaites—a design student in London—first travels to an
ancient iron mine turned tourist attraction, near South Wales, for a suitcase
full of rock containing iron. He then constructs a trash can furnace for
extracting the metal, based on a 16th century woodcut diagram. His first
attempt at smelting is a hilarious disaster, but he is eventually successful
after using his mother’s microwave oven running at full power for half an hour.
And so it goes as he travels
to Britain’s remotest locations in an often comic pursuit of nickel, copper,
mica and plastic with varying degrees of success. The completed toaster looks
more like “what happened?” than a finished product. But Thwaites is an
inspiring maker, as he embraces his failures, recalibrates the “rules” as necessary
(using a high-tech piece of machinery like a microwave, for example, was not
part of the original plan), and sees the project through to the end. The
finished product is not pretty and barely functional. And it cost 250 times
more to make than the price of the store-bought version. But he did it.
Of course Thwaites’
toaster project is a testament to the complexity and ambiguity of our
industrialized society. “My attempt to make a toaster has shown me just how
reliant we all are on everyone else in the world,” he reflects at the end of
the book. “It also has brought into sharp focus the amount of history,
struggle, thought, energy, and material that go into even something as mundane
as a toaster.”
He’s also aware of how
deceptively cheap a $6.95 appliance can be. “The real ‘cost’ of products is
hidden,” he writes. “We don’t see (or smell) the pollution emitted when iron is
smelted or plastics are made. If all the costs associated with their production
were captured, well, toasters would cost a bit more, and perhaps we wouldn’t
buy and discard them so often, and of course not so many people would be able
to afford them...”
But he also sees
building a toaster as an important life lesson that might help slow the hasty manufacture/consume/throwaway
cycle. He says he’ll never throw his toaster away, “because (to put it cornily)
it embodies so many memories. Maybe when we’re in school each of us should
assemble our own toaster, or own kettle our own microwave or something, then
perhaps we’d be more likely to keep these thing for longer, and repair and look
after them. This would mean these products would be more than things that just
come ‘from the shops.’”
Maker Faire Report
My friend, Sally Diggory, shows off the blinky LED broach she made at the Radio Shack tent using a soldering iron. |
Despite the crowds,
this year’s Maker Faire (May 19-20) seemed to have more opportunities for making
things than ever before. In one day my friend Sally Diggory and I managed to solder
blinky LED broaches; snap together plastic rockets; fold the best paper
airplanes; roll poppy seed bombs; and make kinetic sculpture earrings. A feast
for the eyes and intellect, there were numerous 3D printers extruding plastic,
as well as robots, tesla coils, el-wire art, and huge works of mechanized art.
Kids watch Presley Martin's snails making art by eating through multiple layers of colored paper in the Show Barn. |
I loved Michael
LaGrasta’s LED glass-top desk that doubled as a web server. I brought home
instructions for installing a penny and resin countertop, and a pen loaded with
electrically conductive paint. But my favorite idea-guy was Presley Martin of
Seaside, who builds cages for garden snails in which he layers one wall with
brightly colored paper. The snails eat through the paper layers and create
amazingly beautiful designs. Could my worst garden nemesis actually become a
partner in art?
Back yard rug
A recent article in a
gardening magazine inspired me to paint a rug on my concrete patio. We’re
talking about a 25-year-old, roughly finished, stained from who knows what, and
generally unattractive garden patio. I chose a garden theme to my rug, and designed
it around flower stencils I bought at a craft store.
What you need
1 gallon white porch
and floor paint
Large paint brush
2-ounce bottles of acrylic
craft paint in a variety of colors
Stencils
Stencil brushes
Blue painter’s tape
Tape measure
1 gallon clear
concrete sealer
Large paint roller
1 audio book
Painting a concrete
rug is a great opportunity to read a book. Borrow or download a good long book
that you can listen to while painting. (I chose “The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn.”) Start by cleaning the concrete with a pressure washer or garden hose. I
also scrubbed the concrete with a brush and concrete cleaner (unless it’s a
“green” version, keep this chemical away from plants and soil), although I’m
not sure it made a big difference.
Tape off the perimeter
of the rug with painter’s tape, keeping the sides straight and the corners square
using a tape measure and L-square. A perfect rectangle will have matching diagonal
measurements, but close is good enough. Paint inside the tape with two coats of
white porch paint using a brush or roller, following the manufacturer’s
directions for drying times.
Sketch out the overall
design of the rug on a piece of paper, keeping in mind the relative dimensions
of the stencils you will be using. Use bands of colors around the outsides, and
blocks of color in the center section.
My concrete rug really brightens up an otherwise drab concrete patio in my backyard. |
Use the stencils to paint
designs in the center of bands or blocks, dabbing color in with a stencil
brush. Pour a small amount of paint into a plastic container and load paint
brush sparingly for best results. Of course you also have the option of
painting freehand. Don’t be too much of a perfectionist when painting on
concrete—it’s impossible on this irregular surface. The overall effect will
still be striking.
Cover your rug to
protect it from dirt and critters between painting sessions. Finish the rug
with two coats of clear concrete sealer applied with a paint roller at a
windless time of day. Then stand back and admire your patio upgrade.
(Step by step instructions with photos can be found at http://www.instructables.com/id/Concrete-Rug/)
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