making stuff

Things to do with a vacuum sealer

by wolfgang haak on Mai 28, 2011

in brainstorm,Random

vacuum-first-aid

So I’ve got the kit for my sous-vide cooking and I am the (proud) owner of a LAVA V1.00 Premium vacuum sealer. It’s cost me a fair bit of money, so it better makes itself useful around the house.

Here are a few ideas:

  • I cycle a lot, including my daily commute to work.  Bicycle Panniers a re tough place for anything, as keys, spare clothes and essential tools all grind against anything  else in the bag. I want to have a decent first aid kit with me, that survives the inevitable sand and grit influx into the bag.  Vacuum sealed, the first aid kit becomes rigid, dust & waterproof and hard wearing.
  • Bicycle repair kit. I’ve tried to carry a spare inner tube before, but the cardboard box in which they are sold barely survives a couple of days and if that doesn’t finish the tube off, then the constant grinding of sand and grit will chafe it to pieces by the time you need to use it. Vacuum seal ahoy!
  • I’m a lover of warm winter clothes, in particular high quality wools. Unfortunately the local moth population has also figured out how tasty my jumpers are. I’m no fan of saturating my living room with moth poison, so I figured the best way of keeping my winter outfit in good shape is to seal it in.
  • Love computers, help people out repairing stuff and and always have a box of untidy, unwieldy cables using up valuable space. You’ve guessed it, shrink’em down.

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Post image for If you wish to make

If you wish to make

by wolfgang haak on April 2, 2011

in DIY,t-shirt designs.

an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe…

Inspired by this post: http://www.boingboing.net/2011/03/31/symphony-of-science.html, about a new autotune track from the cool gang over at Symphony of Science, I went on listen and download all the tracks from the Symphony of Science. And once catch phrase (because it is so brilliantly executed) was Carl Sagan singing:

“If you wish to make, a pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe”

Awesome. Check it out yourself!

[click to continue…]

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Let’s not be awkward!

Post image for Let’s not be awkward!

by wolfgang haak on März 2, 2010

in making stuff,t-shirt designs.

One of my weird t-shirt idea’s is available at Spreadshirt!

Inspired by the infamous  “Be Calm and Carry on!” WWII poster as discovered by Barter Books, this shirt readsT-Shirt-Lets-no-be-akward:

Get it here: Spreadshirt.co.uk

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Scaffold Shelving

Key Clamp for making a Shelf-  Header

by wolfgang haak on März 1, 2010

in DIY,making stuff

Several years ago,

with the emergence of IKEA, Habitat and co. , the excitement of inexpensive furniture that was good looking and stylish took the western world in a storm. And it is blindingly clear why. Prior to the IKEA era (no disrespect for similar approaches that predate IKEA, but history has the unkind manner of only remembering those who pushed themselves hardest into the collective memory) there was a distinct absence of affordable decorations available. Cheap and nasty was contrasted by beautifully styled/crafted and prohibitively expensive.

For me personally the novelty of IKEA has since worn off. No longer do I receive their annual catalogue, nor does any sense of excitement pre-empt a visit to any of their stores. On the contrary, the continual disappointment with pieces of furniture after successful assembly when my eye wearily wondered over the inevitable spray of chipboard dust that threatened never to be vacuum cleaned out of the carpet again reinforced the understanding that IKEA furniture (for my liking) is best observed from the safety of their catalogue.

And after over one year of moving into my flat I was still falling over a few left-over boxes spew n around the place, with no hope of having a genuinely cool, well built and contemporary shelf to house the content of the boxes.

To the rescue came an idea that I have had for along time. I wanted to build shelves and furniture from pieces of scaffolding. Their rough and hard finish are the perfect marriage for a day to day material while being inexpensive, flexible, readily sourced and easily modded.

The real trouble however is sourcing the stuff. You see it everywhere, scaffold-like systems are used as racks in fashion stores, as rails in buses, urban trains and underground carriages, handrails in car parks and mobile barriers. But if you search for scaffolding on-line, or ask a retailer, it’s always a disappointment. What shows up are these giant gauge and clunky components sturdy enough to construct a medium rise building, but the stuff I saw around and craved was no-where to be found.

That’s because they are called “Key Camps”, not scaffolding. The smaller gauge items are fixed together with connectors that use Allen Key grub screws hence “Key clamps and tubes”.

Key-Clamp-Shelf-Header

Tools and precaution.

The amount of 3.2m size 6 (33.7mm dia) tubes and clamps came delivered in a truck. Gross weight: 98kg. It is pretty obvious that key clamps systems are heavy, hard and unforgiving to anything you smash into. So get a friend to help carrying the tubes around to avoid damage to yourself and your surroundings.

[click to continue…]

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Sapolsky’s outstanding Stanford lecture on “The Uniqueness of Humans”

Reblogged/Bookmarked from Boingboing.net

http://www.boingboing.net/2009/11/10/sapolskys-outstandin.html

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Larry Lessig’s talk about Copyright

by wolfgang haak on November 9, 2009

in Bookmark,Lecture

From Boingboing.net :
Larry Lessig talks about the values of education and science and the need to bring copyright into harmony with them.

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Urban Clothing Jacket -idea

by wolfgang haak on November 4, 2009

in brainstorm,DIY,London,making stuff

I’ve had an idea for while now for urban clothing. I’m not a very fashionable person and my idea is lesser rotating around looks for urban clothing but more about functionality. I’ve been living in London for a number of years now, and I have seen London’s cool, fun, innovative, funky, Hackney-cool, welcoming, curious  and endearing sides as much as I have witnessed and experienced the crime, hardship, randomness and cruelty that governs life in this city.

Functionality in this context is to means cultural and social functionality, clothing that helps to reduce stress, controls the flow of information(visually, audibly , and electromagnetically) , reduces exposure to crime, while remaining functional and inconspicuous.

[click to continue…]

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The boy who harnessed the wind

by wolfgang haak on September 29, 2009

in Bookmark,environment,Lecture,Science

From BoingBoing.net:
“The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind — fantastic new book about a how a Malawian teenager harnessed the power of the wind”

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Interactive Map of Manhatten anno 1609

by wolfgang haak on September 2, 2009

in Bookmark,environment,forest,Science

found on Boingboing.net:

“The Mannahatta Project is an interactive map of Manhattan as it appeared in 1609, indexed by streets. You can enter a landmark name or address and zoom into your favorite New York neighborhood as it appeared in a more primeval time. Shown here, the site of the iconic Flatiron Building: 23rd and 5th.”

http://themannahattaproject.org/

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Found on Boingboing.net:

Wow! From Coilhouse:

Helen Keller — inspiration to generations and inspiration for an entire genre of schoolyard humor — and her teacher and friend Anne Sullivan in a clip from 1930 in which they describe the way in which Helen learned how to speak … It’s a fascinating little clip which pays homage to a woman who, even beyond her amazing circumstances, was a radical socialist, suffragist, and supporter of birth control, who was friends with the likes of Mark Twain and who worked tirelessly to champion the rights of both the downtrodden and the physically disabled.

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