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Episode 3 - History - Final Copy

Page history last edited by admin 12 years, 2 months ago

 

Episode 3: History

 

 

history%20logo.jpg

 

By: Anna Delaney, James Jackson, Marika Motawalla and Joel Tiller

 

 

 

 

PODCAST

Final_History_MakerCulture_Podcast.mp3  

Copy of History Maker_Podcast.mp3

 

Show Notes

Host: 

Anna Delaney

Interviews Conducted By:

Marika Motawalla - pekalongan cheater gemscool komik naruto artav mozilla firefox Noreen Awan, Butter Cream Cupcakes in St. Jacobs, Ontario http://buttercreamcupcakes.ca/index.html

James Jackson - download photoscape harga hp nokia harga blackberry nenek gayung Cam Waldbauer, Objects Inc. in Vancouver, B.C. http://www.objectsinc.net/

Anna Delaney - Marie Sharpe, Arts and Culture Centre in St. Johns, NFLD http://stjohns.artsandculturecentre.ca/main.asp:

Joel Tiller - David J. Perdue, Student, Author, LEGO Expert in Lynchburg, Virginia http://www.davidjperdue.com/

Closing Music:

The Getaway Cars, Naivete

http://www.myspace.com/lovethegetawaycars

 

 

FEATURE 

 

History in the Making

Anna Delaney, James Jackson, Marika Motawalla and Joel Tiller

 

If you weren’t making things one hundred years ago - you'd be dead. Your home, your food, your clothes and even your toys were all made by you or someone you knew. Somewhere along the way, humans seem to have forgotten that we were makers, and instead became consumers.

 

Now, when some people build, sew and bake they are making a conscious choice to return to our maker roots. This movement is makerculture. Today, makers challenge the mainstream and make instead of buy.

What used to be a necessity is now a lifestyle. But how were these people inspired, how did they learn, and how did they get to where they are now?

 

Here are the stories of some modern day makers.

 

Sewing It All Together  

Some of us shop only designer, some of us shop only bargain bin, and some of us hardly shop at all (well, for clothes at least). These people are makers of clothing and accessories.

 

Beth Graham, a yarn seller at Shall We Knit in St. Jacob's, Ontario started knitting seven years ago when she noticed all her friends were doing it, and she wanted to jump on the band-wagon, she said. Graham now knits socks, scarves, and sweaters because she can make exactly what she wants.

 

"Socks I can make myself, I can fit to my large, skinny feet," said Graham. "And they fit better, and they feel better, and they look better, I think."

 

Graham is like a lot of makers, she makes items for herself instead of buying similar products in places like Wal-Mart. Other makers, like Jackie Vass, make products for themselves and for others. Vass started making jewelry four years ago after her and her husband retired from the pottery making business. She currently sells her work at St. Jacob's. 

 

Since she also wears the jewelry she makes, she often sells pieces right off of her neck, she said. "Then I go put another one on, and some days I've gone through three necklaces," said Vass with a laugh.

 

But there's more to Maker Culture than simply making for yourself or for profit. There is also an element of sharing between makers. Marie Sharpe, the head costume designer at the Arts and Culture Centre in St. John's, Newfoundland, began making her own clothes as a teenager and turned her passion into a career. Although she makes most of the costumes for various shows herself, she uses donations from the community to build her collection of costumes.

 

The costume bank has become a place for people to bring things that are precious to them, said Sharpe. If people in the community have things from their parents who passed away, they know the heirlooms will be taken care of here, she said.

 

"(People would say) I don't want to put Dad's top hat in the Good Will, or Mom's fur coat, or Mom's beautiful evening gloves," said Sharpe. "She loved this stuff so much. I could give it to a charity for it to go in a bin. But if I give to you, you'll use it in a show, and then it lives on."

 

Make, Break and Remake: A child's discovery of how things work 

Several decades ago Darin White's mother rolled out of bed, dressed her kids for school and downed a quick coffee. She was going to, for once, make to work awake and on time. Just a quick shower, and she'd be on her way. Then she remembered a four-year-old Darin tinkering with her hair dryer. He had been quiet and strangely captivated so, she thought nothing of it

. It was then she discovered that the once a fully-functioning hair dryer is now in a million indiscernible pieces.

 

“I wanted to know how the thing worked,” laughs Darin White, looking back on the now infamous incident he aptly refers to as his first 'maker' experience. When he took the hair dryer apart and hooked its motor up to a battery he remembers being blown away by what he saw.

 

"I could actually see the different components moving," he remembers. "It was absolutely amazing."

 

These days White works as a security product manager at Research In Motion and is the acting director of Kwartzlab – a hackerspace located in Kitchener, Ontario where like-minded individuals collectively pool their knowledge and creativity in order to see the projects they have been dreaming about come to life.

 

When he wasn’t deconstructing appliances around his parent’s house as a child he was building and creating with his Lego sets or his 150 in One: Electronic Project Kit from Radio Shack.

 

His curiosity for how things work has led him to where he is today, and he admits a lot of what he worked on as a child was purely trial and error.

 

“I never really had anyone explain to me exactly how things worked,” says White. “And, that’s exactly what I am doing now with people young and old at Kwartzlab. I kind of boot strap them into a project where they know all the little intricacies of the projects they’re working on.”

 

Like White, Mark Pavlidis, a software developer and consultant for Pavlidis Consulting, grew up with an insatiable desire to know how things worked.

 

“It was just a natural tendency to deconstruct things and learn as much as I could about how my toys worked so I could eventually build my own,” says Pavlidis.

 

On Christmas morning, when most kids are busy playing with their new toys, Pavlidis remembers reading manuals from front to back so he could know his new toys inside and out.

 

“As a child I used to call them ‘constructions’ instead of instructions,” laughs Pavlidis. “For as long as I can remember this curiosity has been ingrained in me … and I continue to build upon it in whatever I do.”

 

Makers and Bakers

 The wide aisles of wholesalers like Costco and the narrow lanes of the grocery stores may be busy, but a growing number of people don’t want to be a part of that lifestyle.

 

The process of making food from scratch is no longer just a pastime – it is part of a bigger movement. Some people are against the idea of buying and eating mass produced food. This is where Maker Culture comes into play.

 

Making food our own food is a practice that's been around for centuries. But, mass produced food, impersonal packaging, and buying in bulk may be alienating people and getting them back to the basics.

 

Centuries ago people were growing and catching their own food out of necessity, but now when people cultivate their own food from scratch they are making a choice. Noreen Awan is one of them.

 

"I've been baking my whole life, I started in my mother's kitchen," she said. Awan has made the choice to do away with all store-bought cakes and make her own from scratch instead.

 

She is the owner of Buttercream Cupcakes in Waterloo, Ontario at the St. Jacob's Farmer's Market. Awan concocts a new flavour of cupcake every month and she ices each cupcake every morning at 5 a.m. 

 

“Doing it myself means a lot, when you have your own business, you’re responsible for absolutely everything, you’re responsible for marketing as well as your item…I put everything I have into it,” she said.

From picking the freshest ingredients to presenting the completed cupcakes, Awan makes sure she is part of the whole process from start to finish. By combining baking and making, Awan shows how she has made the choice to produce her own baked goods, sell them and go against mainstream mass production.

 

Chocolate maker Adri Horne also has a stall in the market and has been making chocolate from scratch for fifteen years. The quality of the product and love she has for the process it what keeps her making chocolate, she said.

 

Making, selling and, of course, eating her own chocolate, shows that Horne is another maker who isn’t content with what is sold in stores. She, like many others, is literally taking ingredients into their own hands and making something different.

 

MacGyver as ProtoMaker

Angus MacGyver needs to light a fuse, but he has no matches. He removes the crystal with his Swiss army knife, and holds it so that sunlight is concentrated into a fine beam. He aims the beam it at the fuse, and successfully lights it.

 

MacGyver was the ultimate do-it-yourselfer. But he was also just a TV character, on a show that depended on special effects. We often forget about the people responsible for making those effects as part of their everyday job; they are the real makers.

 

Cam Waldbauer is a manager and special effects technician for Vancouver-based Objects Inc., and Maker Culture flows through his veins.

 

He never had the chance to work on MacGyver, but has done special effects work on shows like Viper, and the Hollywood films 2012, and the new A-Team film. Cam is a self-described maker; a fabricator, welder, and machinist. He said that he first learned to weld when he was five years old, and he says that MacGyver played a huge role in the emergence of the Do-It-Yourself ethic and garage machinists.

 

"I think it kind of intrigued people, you know, just kind of showing you could build something out of nothing, even though us in the film business know that there's never something out of nothing."

 

SteamPunk: Re-making the Past

 Maker Culture represents a fusion of the past, present, and the future; Makers are in the process of creating a new and exciting future for the entire planet.

 

There is a movement which fuses these concepts of past, present, and future. That movement is SteamPunk, and it embodies the very ethic and ideas of Maker Culture and Do-It-Yourself that this entire project is focused on. SteamPunk devotees imagine and invent a Victorian world where the primary form of power is the steam engine and where the science fiction devices of H.G. Wells and Jules Verne are alive and well. And, oh yes, computers, like those imagined by Charles Babbage, were actually built and functioning.

 

G.D. Falksen is a history student and author of fiction, whose work includes pieces from a wide range of genres, including Steam Punk, pulp adventure, historical fiction, horror, sci-fi and fantasy. He described Steam Punk as "essentially yesterday's future - or perhaps 'the day before yesterday'. The advantage of modern SteamPunk is that we know where technology ultimately goes and how society develops, and we're able to take modern tech systems and concepts and re-imagine them using a Victorian aesthetic."

 

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VIDEO: SteamPunk Convention http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5dJ1YLNC64

 

He also says that many of the current techologies that comprise the Maker Culture ideal's are not new ideas. "One thing that is so fascinating is forensics, mass-production, information networks, mass transit, office life, etc., were anticipated by the 19th and early 20th centuries. Part of the fun of SteamPunk is envisioning the present or even the future in a Victorian context, and then to see just how closely these modern concepts match with historical fact and imagination."   

 

 

LINKS 

For more information on any of our interview subjects, or on the History in the Making podcast or feature article, please refer to these helpful web links. 

 

Sewing it All Together

 

1. http://www.dincum.com/

A website devoted to the popular act of collecting antique and toy sewing machines, including photos, contact information, and the detailed history of many different types of machine.

Sewing it All Together 

2. http://readymade.com

A do-it-yourself guide in magazine form, which dedicates a section for do-it-yourself clothing instructions. 

3. http://stjohns.artsandculturecentre.ca/main.asp

The homepage for the Arts and Culture Centre in St. John's, NL where Marie Sharpe works as the Head Costume Designer. 

4. http://www.therovingspinners.com

A website which provides more information on the yarn sold at Shall we Knit in St. Jacob's, where Beth Graham works. 

5. http://www.needlesandpins.ca/about.html

A knitting store in London which sells various types of yarn and supplies for knitters.

 

Make, Break and Remake: A child's discovery of how things work 

 

6. http://www.davidjperdue.com/

David J. Perdue is a lego enthusiast. He's written two books during his 22 years on this planet. Perdue is finishing up his last year at Liberty University in Lynchburg Virginia. 

7. http://kwartzlab.ca/

Kwartzlab is a collective or 'hackerspace' in Kitchener Ont. where do-it-yourselfers can share their passion for everything from circuitry and robotics to jewelery and costume-making. 

8. http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/1528122/what_is_maker_culture_diy_roots.html?cat=46

A great reference for understanding what 'MakerCulture' and the DIY philosophy is all about. 

9. http://www.canadiandesignresource.ca/officialgallery/category/toys/page/3/

The Canadian Design Resource is a blog where 'Makers' from around Canada post their latest creations. 

10. http://www.instructables.com/

Instructables is a web-based collective where 'Makers' from around the world share, learn and collaborate with each other. Instructables originated, and germinated, in the MIT Media Lab.

 

Makers and Bakers 

 

11. http://buttercreamcupcakes.ca/index.html

From Noreen Awan's kitchen to you, here are cupcakes in the making. 

12. http://www.stjacobs.com/html/shopping-farmersmarkets.html

This farmer's market is a microcosm of all things maker from food to clothes. 

13. http://www.londonsfarmersmarket.com/

The London Farmer's market brings the best and the brightest from organic farms 

14. http://www.ehow.com/how_2199842_own-chocolate-truffles.html

Doing-it-yourself has never been so easy. A few easy steps to homemade truffles

15. http://whatscookingamerica.net/PegW/ButtercreamIcing.htm

The making of buttercream icing.

 

Makers, MacGyver, and Re-Inventing the Past 

 

16. http://www.objectsinc.net/

The website for Objects Inc. special effects in Vancouver, B.C. 

17. http://www.leevalley.com/home/page.aspx?c=1&p=47718

Website for the London-area Lee Valley tool shop. For over 30 years Lee Valley has been serving the wood working, gardening, and general do-it-yourselfer through their long line of tools and instructional workshops. 

18. http://www.discoverychannel.ca/Showpage.aspx?sid=19241

Junk Raiders - A show dedicated to professional carpenters, trash hunters, and recyclers who are trying to retrofit a condo for one customer, using only trash. Do-It-Yourself construction and green building taken to the extreme. 

19. http://thereifixedit.com/

Perhaps the ultimate Do-It-Yourself website. Photo's submitted by fans of the site outline the highs (and lows) of how people have taken the DIY ethic into their own hands to solve many of life's common problems - with hilarious, yet often practical, results. A sort of DIY resource for the rest of us who are not so technolgically inclined.

20. http://www.ted.com/talks/rachel_armstrong_architecture_that_repairs_itself.html

This video represents the future of maker culture with respect to construction and building design. architecture that incorporates aspects of a living system to repair itself. Rachel Armstrong is a medical doctor, producer, author, and arts collaborator. Her goal and hope is all about the future of cities and how they will be able to replace the energy they draw from the environment as well as respond to the needs of their populations and eventually become regarded as “alive”! (From Ted.com) 

 

 

Comments (1)

hemant said

at 4:23 am on Jul 10, 2011

Her goal and hope is all about the future of cities and how they will be able to replace the energy they draw from the environment
http://youraustintxhome.com/

http://austin-rental.com/

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