Category Archives: Entrepreneurs

Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire in Review: Learning by Doing & Creating!

IMG_3002Under the roof of The Concourse in Hudson, a celebration of innovation and the DIY culture is under way on a sunny Saturday in March. Mini Maker Faire exhibitors and attendees are largely indistinguishable. From the very young to the very old, participants flow through together, engaging each other and all the wonderful things their minds can conjure up. It is human creativity on full display, just waiting a chance to play.” Mitchell Brown, Tampa Mini Maker Faire: Nirvana 4 Geeks & Nerds

With these words, Mitchell Brown, a reporter for 83 Degrees, a Tampa Bay media group devoted to creating “ a new narrative for a new economy”, perfectly captured the spirit and intent of our 2013 Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire!

“It’s impossible to leave the Mini Maker Faire uninspired,” writes Brown. “Ultimately, that’s the whole idea.”

Read the complete article at : http://83degreesmedia.com/features/makers040913.aspx and stay inspired with us all year long!

 

Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013 – The Day in Pictures

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Are You Ready? We Are! See You Soon!

make a world of possibilities

Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire Program Online!

Event map

Our 2013 Event Program is now online!  Hardcopy versions are being printed courtesy of Dex Imaging in Tampa, who graciously donated printing services last year, too. ! Thank you, Dex Imaging, for your support of the Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire!

Program schedule

Mentagy – A Game for your Brain – Comes to Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013!

allynJPGAllyn Kahn, of New Port Richey is locally known as a long time chess instructor, as well as a Champlain College Continuing Professional Studies Professor teaching math, statistics, philosophy and critical thinking since 2000.  And he’s also an award winning  game maker.

His puzzle, Mentagy, which he’s bringing to Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013,  has received multiple awards, including the 2012 Puzzle of the Year Award from Creative Child and  the 2012 Brain Child Award from Tillywig,

Developed to help his chess students improve their decision-making, Mentagy is puzzle funnow available on multiple platforms, as a game board, puzzle book, and as a digital puzzle.  At our Mini Maker Faire, Allyn will have game playing opportunities at his exhibit and will be providing a workshop on ” The science of Neuroplasticity: How doing mental activities, like puzzles and games, creates new networks in your brain, at any age.”

Join us at Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013 and expand your mind!

Meet Our Makers!

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At least some of them – More are coming on board in the next couple of days, bringing a rich variety of science, art, craft, engineering , music, food, and more, showcasing and celebrating the inventive spirit and the amazing work of all kinds of makers across Tampa Bay and beyond.

The great folks listed here are bringing art, music, robots, games, puzzles, inventions, ham radio, crafts, trades, jewelry, electronic gadgets and gizmos and much, much more for everyone to experience and enjoy!

Keep watching our Maker page throughout the rest of the week, to see the growing list of Makers!

Our 2013 Makers so Far…

Commercial Makers

gabotronics

Origami Owl

Upcycled Studios

Makers

backyard workshop

chuck stephens

Frets1

FIRST

GCARC

inanimate reason

in10didLI4E

Mentagy

MEOWSER

Pasco Teens

USF RIG

thinkamingo

urban conga

USGS

fur and taxidermy

young makers

See you at Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013!

TBMMF Featured Maker: Thinkamingo!

thinkamingoWith a splash of digital pink, the Adair Family, the Von Trapps of apps,  brings Thingamingo, Inc. to  our 2013 event to showcase their intergenerational inventiveness.  Ann and her husband Jon founded Thinkamingo Inc in late 2011, and share a bit here, about how they made app development an all-family effort.

“We homeschool our two children, annElizabeth, 13, and William, 9,” explains Ann. “As the President, I handle the business tasks, social media, content development, and other odds and ends. Jon is our Vice President and Senior Developer. We wanted to keep our startup costs low, and Jon, a master developer, tackles all of the graphic design and programming. The kids have important roles, too. Elizabeth is our Junior Developer and future patent attorney. William is on the Creative Team and tests a lot of apps. We have the luxury of not having to outsource anything.”

Jon Ann and Jon bring some diverse backgrounds to the development process.  Ann holds Bachelor and Master of Music degrees, has taught graduate studies in 20th-century/post-tonal music analysis as an adjunct instructor, and her primary occupation the last 25 years has been bassoonist, pianist, or music director.   Jon has a background in computer science and was working on large enterprise software projects before starting Thinkamingo, as well as experience in photography and graphic design.

Now one year down the road,  Thinkamingo has published 12 apps across a range of topics, from educational to entertainment.  Their Story Dice app, around which they’re focusing their TBMMF exhibit,  was featured by MAKE Magazine’s Mark Frauenfelder on National Public Radio and on BoingBoing.net.

Thinkamingo’s Junior Developer, Elizabeth, will be on hand at the Faire to talk to kids, specifically, about building apps. She knows whereof she speaks, too! Elizabeth made and presented an app at a Microsoft Hackathon, she’s a FIRST robotics team member, and a Girl Scout, to boot.

Thinkamingo will be showcasing two projects going  at the TBMMF.
Flash Fiction with Story Dice, where participants will use the Story Dice app and create a short story on a souvenir card they can take with them, and a Group Fiction Project, where participants can contribute a sentence to an ongoing Mini-Maker Faire-y Tale to be featured on the Thinkamingo website in April.

The Adairs will also be providing at least one workshop at the Faire to help Makers “Spark your Creativity”!

We’re delighted the Thinkamingo gang is joining us at Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013, and can’t wait to see the stories that develop!

Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire Featured Maker: Upcycled Studio

Upcycled StudiosKen and Diana Swallow are a husband and wife creative team based in Tampa, who will be joining us this year at the Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire with their awesome creations from their Upcycled Studio.  Ken and Diana took a little time to share a bit about their work and creative vision with us here at TBMMF.

TBMMF: So what’s Upcycled Studio?

Upcyled Studio: Ken creates upcycled mixed media assemblage sculpture DIANAandKENswallowusing broken electronics, vintage items and found objects. Diana has a passion for metalsmithing and jewelry design and incorporates found objects in her works. Individually we’ve created an online following and fan base, Ken under the name KenBots and Diana under Diana Swallow Designs. Together we participate in local art shows under the name Upcycled Studio. While different, our work shares the similar theme of upcycling and comes together beautifully at our shows.

TBMMF : What got you started?

Diana: Ken and I both started our artistic endeavors at a very young age. Ken took apart his grandmothers radio to see how it worked and has been taking things apart and putting them back together ever since. His math and science test scores caught the eye of a recruiter when he was in high school and was offered an apprenticeship in electronics, from there they sent him to university for all things computer related. He has been using spare parts to create sculptures for friends and colleagues for nearly 40 years, a few years ago when he was laid off from a job he found he had time on his hands and started tinkering again.

spinnerringI started creating things from anything I could get my hands on from a very young age, scraps of fabric and yarn from my mother sparked my creativity.  My dad had a construction company and on the weekends I’d watch him weld and fabricate things from metal. As an adult I worked for many years in graphic design and after deciding to change career paths a few times, I found myself in a metalsmthing class using those artistic skills and turning jewelry designs that had been in my head for years into actual jewelry.

One day while helping Ken sort through parts I noticed some interesting pieces: trikebikegears, strips of aluminum, saxophone keys and more. Instantly she knew these all had jewelry potential. Combining fabrication skills I learned in metalsmithing I started created upcycled jewelry. Ken was approached by the organizers for the Orlando Mini Maker Faire and asked him to participate so in May of 2012 we packed up the car with our creations and headed to Orlando to see what people would think. The positive feedback was overwhelming. We’ve done about seven or eight shows locally since, and are selling online worldwide.

TBMMF: What keeps you going?

Diana: We motivate each other. We love what we do. Hearing positive feedback. We believe in recycling and upcycling. Yes some stuff is junk but a lot of it still has life.

TBMMF: What’s your favorite part of a build?

Diana: For both of us its seeing the design in our head come together as a real object we can touch with our hands.

TBMMF: What’s your favorite building material?

Diana: For Ken its brass, for me gemstones and gears.

TBMMF: What would you tell other wannabe Makers who might think they don’t have any new ideas?

GE Blue BugDiana : Design is all around you, inspiration is all around you, don’t try to copy something else is doing, put your own spin on it. Trying to copy what someone else has done exactly will lead to frustration. Look at shapes you see in nature or what you’ve seen on TV and think about new ways something like that could work. You don’t know what you can do until you try, start small and take it from there.

TBMMF: What are you looking forward to at the Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire?

Diana: One of our favorite parts of displaying our work has been the light we see in peoples eyes when they recognize something they’ve seen before and seeing it used in a new way. When they see something that they have at home or threw away because they thought it was junk and then realize that what they see as junk, we see as art. We plan on having some parts on display on our table for people to come by and try to identify. Its always fun to see parents bring their kids over and tell them what things are from. Sometimes they get it right, sometimes they get it wrong but its a learning process and a lot of fun.

TBMMF: Anything else you’d like to share?

Diana: Before you throw something away, think about other uses it might have. Keeping things out of landfills benefits us all.

Ken: Is it simply junk or items that were allocated to the landfills and junk yards? Its all about transforming parts of discarded items into something original: in effect breathing new life into them and having fun while doing it.

You can meet Diana and Ken in person at Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire, and see those transformations firsthand.   Thanks, Upcycled Studio, for giving us an inside look at your life and art!

Meet Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire Maker Jamie Cunningham

Backyard workshopJamie Cunningham, aka  the Backyard Mad Scientist, will be showcasing his DIY inventiveness  as a Maker at our  2013 Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire in March, where he’ll be bringing his homemade 3D printer and some of the cool things he’s made with it, like parts for his homemade CNC machine!

Jamie will also have his latest project  ”Monster in a Box” , a Halloween prop that incorporates microcontrollers, stepper motors and electronics.

And he says, “I’m also planning a “top secret” project .”

We asked Jamie to share a bit about his work and rather than repeat himself so soon after a similar interview request, he referred us to his answers for EE Web

Here’s the highlights:

Air Force Tech school is what really inspired his creative enterprise, and over the intervening years, he wound his way from “bomb loader” for the Air Force to circuit board manufacturing to software development and quality control work, finally ending up as a CAM operator, and then tinkerer extraordinaire in his Backyard Workshop Maker’s oasis.

There, he told EE Web,” Recently  after building my CNC machine in the garage, I’ve started to mess around with micro controllers (Parallax Propeller to be exact),” hence the Monster in a Box.

Jamie told EE Web his favorite hardware tool is his home built CNC manchine, learning about CNC-cwhich is also one of his favorite and most challenging builds. But he’s also very fond of his homemade foundry, which while not technically a tool, is totally awesome.    We here at TBMMF have seen his foundry and   He uses the foundry to melt aluminum and cast his own parts “usually that were cut out of foam on the CNC machine.”

Jamie also used his CNC machine recently to cut out some three dimensional foam letters for the looking at CNC made gears-cTEDxYouth@TampaBay event back in December, a process he invited local high school FIRST Tech Challenge Team Duct Tape to come watch and learn about.  The kids had a great time and were totally inspired by Jamie’s mechanical self-sufficiency.

It’s worth quoting Jamie’s remarks on why he likes the CNC machine so much: “ I like it best because it has been the most challenging and also the most rewarding, I can make just about anything I can think up (as long as I can figure out how to model it). The first machine I made, helped me make parts for the second machine – can’t beat that .”

No. You can’t.

Wonder what that “top secret project” is?

You can learn more about Jamie’s projects at his website, Backyard Workshop and see some of his work in the photo gallery there.