| Computer-Controlled Machining Assignment Week of March 12, 2014: This week's assignment is to "Make Something Big." I am abandoning my human body focus for my garden. Someday I will make a six foot tall model of some organ but given a sheet of plywood, the desire to use a ShopBot and the opportunity to create something beautiful, a trellis comes to mind. | 1. First step was to download Inkscape.   | 
| 2. I searched Google images to remember what actual ginkgo
            leaves look like and to see artist renditions, especially
            line drawings of the leaves.  | 3. Among the images I perused, I discovered Artistic Creation
              India, a company which "transforms spaces... with
            laser cutting expertise." Their pattern of ginkgo leaves was
            very similar to the vision I had in my own head.  | 
| 4. I spent several hours viewing tutorials and learning about creating tiled clones in Inkscape. I feel the need to download a manual onto my Kindle. The power to the Haystack Fab Lab where the actual ShopBot resides will not be on for a month. That is my design timeline. | 5. Here is my leaf drawn with the Bezier tool.  | 
| 6. Here is my first attempt at creating tiled clones.  | 7. May 3 - I redesigned the trellis and finally had a file
            to take to PartWorks and the ShopBot.  | 
| 8. May 4 - the trellis is created and brought home.  | 9. May 11: the trellis is painted, the daffodils are
            blooming, and the weigela is budding out. As is the case
            with every Fab Lab assignment thus far, I learned everything
            beginning at a baseline of zero. My Inkscape abilities
            increased the most at the Fab Lab workshop last weekend when
            I sat between to my middle school students and they designed
            a bevy of key chains and coasters. It's all progress.  Mickie Flores Home |