Clawing into the new year

January 5th, 2009

Happy new year everyone!

While there’s been a few delays, I’m very happy to say that the first pre-ordered claws shipped before new years! With only a few left to go, the rest should ship within the next few days!

I’m also glad to say the pre-orders also included my first special-order batch; a set of 16 instead of ten and in a nice light green.

Like a pale green forest.. of claws.

Like a pale green forest.. of claws.

Packed neatly together for a safe journey

Packed neatly together for a safe journey

Pre-orders are now over though, so prices from here on will require additional shipping cost.

For a set of Ten sew-on claws; small is £10, Medium is £11, Large is £12.

All claws are cast in sets of 10 to ensure uniform colour across the set, the backs are then sanded flat and hand-drilled.

Postage to the UK is £1.75, £6.40 to the USA, and about £5.40 for Europe (please ask for specific quote). All postage is signed-delivery wherever possible to ensure receipt.

Custom numbers and colours are available on request, though cost and production time may vary. Please email me to discuss it.

I accept paypal but prefer Google Checkout. Until the shop is running, I can provide you with an invoice for any order manually.


One of the other items produced before xmas was my first commission for jewellery. And now the new year has passed I’m allowed to mention it.

I was commissioned to produce a set of modern sterling-silver cufflinks containing blinking LEDs. For my first foray into silverwork, I think they came out rather nicely, and I’m expecting to hear back from the commissioner soon as to what the person they were given to would like engraved on the rear of the cufflinks. Then they can be given their final polishing too!

Caught in-step

Caught in-step

A brief video of them is here: Cufflinks flashing (1730Kb – 13s)

RBW and after

December 9th, 2008

Well RBW’s been over for a week now, and I’m almost sorted out again. I’d like to thank the staff of the con for trying their best given highly adverse conditions.

From the first day we were told we wouldn’t be coming back to the Royal National Hotel next year, and soon found out why. The hotel refused to honour confirmed bookings, rooms were in a poor state, hotel staff were surly, and other events had been interleaved with the convention meaning events had to be packed up early or canceled so rooms could be emptied rather than left  as they were overnight. The main problem though was that the hotel “washed the carpets” in the room the Dealers were supposed to be using, meaning we got shoved in a room half the hight and a third the width, upstairs and down cramped corridoors. Well out of the way, and with some artists moved down to the lobby, traffic was greatly reduced.

There were mistakes on the con-staff side too, but in their defense there had been an almost complete change in staff just a month beforehand, leaving very little time to prepare. My main issue with them though was the timetable. There wasn’t one in the con-book, the only one on the website did not match the actual one, and communication about changes in events was very poor. But they are rebuilding from scratch for next year, so I have hope that next years con will be much better.

And as allways, the Boat Party remains the jewel in the con’s crown, this year seeing us on board a huge triple-decked boat with two bars, colour-changing lighting, dance-floor and open upper deck. The boat party was quite epic.

Claws

As far as sales go, my best seller was pre-orders on the sew-on resin claws I’ve been working on. I had hoped to have been selling the claws themselves, but due to a small problem with my resin supplier, I had to use slow-cure silicones. And with all claw moulds produced from a single master, it meant there wasn’t enough time to make enough moulds for the full sets of ten.

Close up claws

Close up of claws

The pre-orders sold at full prices, but with free postage, and should still be on track to ship a little before xmas (with the exception of my first custom colour blend set). I also had enquiries at the con about wether I could produce the claws so they reacted to UV light, glowed in the dark or came with embedded flashing LEDs. I’m looking into these possibilities and should have answers by the new year.

Other items

Foxxie Fluffs! These adorable little fuzz-balls were a surprise sucess, and I’ve had enquiries about them even after the con. As soon as I can obtain more raw materials, expect to see them appear for sale here on the site, or directly at LondonFur meets. A couple sold in the RBW charity auction.

Sewing Kits! A number of these sold, and amusingly one to someone with a trouser-emergency.

Tea Tree and Peppermint wipes! Again, a few of these sold, mostly to face/bodypainters.

UV Sushii Fish Earrings! Only two sets sold in the end, but they were perhaps a long-shot. Perhaps in part this explained in the number of times I had to say that they were made from brand new fish bottles, not recycled fishy ones. Also rather over-estimated the number of people who would have peirced ears.

Where from here?

I have a couple of private comissions I’m working on to have finished before their xmas deadlines, and until they’re handed over I can’t say much about them.

Before xmas hits though, the site shop will come online selling the claws, Foxxie Fluffs, sewing kits and other items.

I’m also working on a couple of new products. One would be resin noses of varying types, and the other would be resin teeth. The teeth will hopefully be made avaiable individually and in custom fixed arangements. The latter will depend on having a custom layout generator included into the shop.

There is also the possibility that I may have to move house in the next few months. Wether this spectre turns up or not, I’ll be lightening myself of a lot more interesting and usefull items, so keep an eye on the ebay listings.

So until my next update (and now things are getting back in order, there should be many!), thanks for reading and have a merry christmas! 🙂

Ebay, October pt1. – Mostly optics

October 2nd, 2008

Using ten-day auctions, I should only be making a note about new listings every couple of weeks, so about twice a month. Hopefully that won’t be too invasive on peoples feeds!

I have ten new items listed today, and two items ending in 3 days time. The new ones have a few interesting optical items that may be of interest to the experimenter.

New today:
Fibre-optic block, 19mm dia, 15mm thick
Fibre-optic block, 32mm dia, 20mm thick
Fibre-optic block, 27mm dia, 17mm thick
Chromatic lens assembly from photocopier, 32mm dia
Repromaster 1:8/210mm lens enlarger projector
Eumig Eupro-Zoom 1:1.3 F15-25 cine film projector lens
AirReel Cryoproducts TCG3 Level Indicator, nitrogen
Folding screen for JVC GR-DVL9500 Mini DV spares repair
Colour Viewfinder for JVC GR-DVL9500 DV spares repair
Hammer multitool stainless steel measure knife file saw

3 days to go:
Vintage “AK” Precision Drill Press, 55cm/21.5″, repair
10 inch scaffolding pully

More details

September 27th, 2008

Today’s been busy will all sorts of minor maintainance jobs, but there’s a couple of points I though you might be interested in.

The main one is that when my grandfather passed on last year, one of the items in his estate was an origional copy of A Treatise on Horology, possibly the definitive text on clock and watch making. I looked it up on Amazon at one point. The cheapest second hand copy was £450.

It is of course no longer in print, and I beleive was published in the tail-end of the 19th century. With that in mind, it’s fair to say it’s copyright has expired. I intend to Gutenburg it.

It’s currently in the possesion of my cousin, and we’ve come to an agreement that I can borrow it from him to scan it into my computer providing I’m careful. It’s about the size of one of those old family bibles, and seems to have the same wafer-thin paper, so I’ve begun stripping down an old lightweight USB scanner. That way I can place the scanner on the book, not the other way around, and reduce the chance of damaging the spine.

Along with other useful public domain texts, I’ll create a small “library” section on the website where they can be accessed as they’re scanned and converted. Scanning A Treatise on Horology will be designated “project-005”, and all library entries will be tagged “library”.

Also, a note to myself. The relevant dimensions of the Hurley typewriter:

Total footprint: 10-13/16″W * 15-13/16″D (274mm * 401mm) (excluding 3/8″ protrusions for feet at sides)
Keyboard space; 10″W * 4.5″D. (254mm * 114mm) (max height base to keytops 1.5″)

Main frame space; 8-5/8″D * 10-1/4″W (219mm * 260mm)
Main frame hole; 7-3/8″D * 9-7/8″W (187mm * 251mm) (1/2″ Radius corners)
Frame stand-offs; 5″ (126mm) (not counting top plate protrusions)
Frame base thickness; 3/8″ (9mm)
Clear base void; 9-1/2″D * 10-1/8″W * 1-3/4″H (241mm * 257mm * 45mm) (exclude 5mm protrusions around feet)

Typeset arch intrudes into main space by 3-3/4″H * 4-3/4″D from top dead centre to middle of arch. Effective as CPU fan vent?

Will need stripping and new Japan-black.

I’ve also been pointed to a mini keyboard that would fit the space, thanks davegodfrey! It’s a membrane board so wouldn’t make a good “clicky” noise, but it’s a strong contender as it has a function-key that gives a full range of keyboard buttons.

Typewriters are complex things

September 25th, 2008

Last week I took collection of a pair of broken typewriters via Ebay. Getting them back to the workshop on public transport was a bit of an adventure, with each weighing over 15Kg. That and I’ve caused a security alert on the London Underground before now for taking a folding bicycle with me. Goodness knows what they’d do if they found me carrying two bags full of heavy mechanical things! But if they will insist on not having signs up and opening the luggage barriers for them, then what do they expect? But that’s a rant for another time.

The typewriter wasn’t much of a choice. Unidentified, largely undescribed, but fairly cheap and fairly close by. Postage on these sort of things is a killer, so it was the best compromise between price and collection in person.

If I hadn’t collected in in person though, I’d never have gotten to see the sellers classically tumbledown antique “music” shop. He sells gramophones, all manner of valve radio sets, vintage records. If you’re ever near Hendon Central, I’d recommend a peek in the window. Turn right out of the station, it’s about 10 shops up on your left, past the bus-stop.

Back to topic. The typewriter I’d won was a very sorry looking “Hurley”. It not only looked like something that could have written the Necronomicon, it looks like Elder Gods had been using it. Every bit of the mechanism was coated in staggering amounts of grease and fluff. If it had been a sandwich toaster, I’d say it’d been on that top shelf above the cooker for a good couple of decades.

So after bagging it up in the reliable old wheelie luggage (which never gets a second glance on public transport, yet can carry many times more than a students backpack or a folding bicycle. Where’s the logic in that?), I handed the money over. Then the proprietor noted he had another one he was going to put up on ebay shortly, and asked if I’d be interested in that as well.

Following the Contact reasoning of “Why have one, when you can have two for twice the price?”, I agreed and got myself a slightly better condition Underwood as well.

It’s a good thing too as it turned out.

As with many a steampunk, I’m after the keys. There’s quite a shortage of them it seems, particularly in the UK. I’ve seen batches from craft-suppliers in the USA going for absolutely silly money. And the Hurley has keys that are some sort of single brass pressing formed around the steel key lever itself! Even if they were cut off, there’s no way to change the markings without utterly destroying them.

Probably because it’s from the USA, the Underwood’s keys are as I hoped the Hurleys would have been. Metal cups, some padding and chromed brass pressings. Keys that can be modified.

But there’s not enough of them just yet for anything, so they’ve been set to one side. Apart from them though, the typewriters have a lot of useful bevel gears, adjustable return springs, ratchets, escapements and power regulators (an interesting item on the Hurley; a sealed pot containing a rotor and 1/16th lead balls).

Some folk know I hate the idea of steampunks breaking up perfectly good clocks and watches only to glue their component parts onto items decoratively. It offends my engineers heart to see the height of hand-engineering ruined in unskilled hands, defiled by things like glue and plastic. Incompatible gears pressed together uselessly in mechanically impossible arrangements, never to move again. Defying their very essence.

I fear I may be rather more the Steam than the Punk.

But neither of these typewriters are apparently anything special. Neither seems to be valuable, functional, or even complete. A few empty tapped holes for items previously removed. Staggeringly unlikely that even if I wished to I would never be able to get them working again. These were scrap through and through.

The Underwood came apart without much issue, except at the final stages. It’s carcass too small and fiddly for any other use, it was ended with an angle grinder to remove a few last pieces of the mechanism. But there’s few other fates when parts are irreversibly pinned in place.

The Hurley though was more of a challenge. The original listing was from above and never gave a sense of the things size. With the guts removed, it would leave a huge cubic space in the middle of it’s strong cast-iron frame. Perfect for modification and re-use!

Most screws shifted in time, but a few forced me to resort to my screw extractor set. If you ever buy a set yourself, HSS every time. You’ll save in the long run.

But what will I do with this? What would fit in the middle of a typewriter? Well for one thing, a mini-ATX motherboard would. Possibly even a smaller full-ATX. It is quite large, and the space is tall enough for expansion cards.

It’s going to require a little more research. The key area is fractionally too small for the smallest keyboard I can find for sale online, even with it’s housings removed. Currently I see my only option here as recreating a matrix from momentary-contact switches and wiring them to a standard keyboards controller. Power isn’t too much of an issue if I were to use the PSU from a Shuttle PC or 1U rack-mount server, as both would fit in the base where I presume a HDD would fit quite easily as well. The PSU would mean cutting an access hole in the cast iron though.

I’m currently thinking a monitor capable of operating in portrait mode would work quite well.

Mouse and optical drive are both outstanding issues, though I’m sure something will come to me in time.

It should mesh together fairly well. The Hurley has ten extra buttons above the keyboard, I think for adjusting the margin spacing on the carriage return. But there are bits missing, so I can’t be sure. However above the buttons is a damaged display panel showing orders of magnitude. This seems an ideal location for system lights, and with a momentary-contact rotary switch, the Red-Black selector dial can be repurposed as power.

Stay tuned, this should be an interesting project. I’ll keep entries in the work-blog relating to it tagged as Project-003.

Armatron now on ebay!

September 24th, 2008

Just so folk know, the Armatron seen just a few days ago is currently on ebay. I said it would be going up, and it has. 4 days to go!

http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=270277490801

Up in arms – Tandy Armatron Dissection

September 15th, 2008

I’ve not been very well these past few weeks, but things are brightening up. To get myself back in the saddle, I decided to do some tinkering and sate a long-standing curiosity.
In the late 70s to mid 80s, Tandy/Tomy made the Armatron. A robotic arm with six degrees of freedom. I never got to own one as a child, as they were off the market by then. But earlier this year I found one going cheaply on ebay, and pounced.
While the magic of a robot arm has perhaps faded a little, it was the conversion of one to steam by CrabFu Steamworks that pointed out the unique property of this toy. The whole thing is driven from one electric motor. The full 6 degrees of motion are driven entirely mechanicly, via two joysticks. The CrabFu article had one tantalising view of the mechanism within, but no details on how it actually managed to channel the power via joysticks.
I had to know how this gearbox worked!

The untouched Armatron

More after the cut!

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This weeks new ebay listings

July 24th, 2008

Made a bit of a boo-boo today. Listed a few items before realising I hadn’t switched accounts, so part of todays sales are on my personal account. The items sold there will include VAT like with the ones on my business account.
7x Sony QTR-3 mini data cartridges 1.6Gb/3.2Gb Travan
11x Digital TLZ04-CA DAT mini tape cartridges
18x 3M DC 2120 Mini Data Cartidges, new unused, rare!
Adaptec AHA-2930CU PCI SCSI card
Adaptec AHA-2920A PCI SCSI card
Kopin Cyberdisplay 320 greyscale .24″ 6mm LCD QVGA HUD

3m Broadband modem cable, RJ11 to RJ45, grey ethernet
Dual-head Appian Jeronimo Pro 16Mb PCI
Dual-head Appian Jeronimo Pro 8Mb PCI
Dell Rambus Memory Terminator Continuity Cards (9578D)

I’ll be away for a couple of days from tomorrow, but will be back by Monday.

Minor site changes

July 15th, 2008

For your viewing convenience, please find that the website sidebar now has a tag cloud, and link to the sites syndication on LiveJournal.

What do I think of Naruto?

July 15th, 2008

Some of you may have seen these on my art galleries, and the biggest thing I’m asked is always “why??”.

Cut down

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