Sunday, October 14, 2007

DIY 606



I'm a freak for drum machines. I love the Roland tr-606, vintage 1986 analog coolness. But i'm poor and I can't afford a tr-808 or a Jomox drum machine, so in the spirit of melting holes in things, here's pic's of my modifications. All of these can be easily found on the internet, and with a little patience and a very small investment in parts you can do these too, they're dead easy. My only reccomendation is to use shielded multiwire cabling to keep things neat inside your machine. There's not much room in there.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Ready Made Mag


Hey... our first issue of Ready Made magazine arrived. It's pretty cool. I think we're hooked, so check it out!

http://readymademag.com/

Thursday, July 5, 2007

What's for Dinner?

Our DIY nature also carries into the kitchen -- so much so that we need to have a blog just for cooking! If you're hungry, go for some Big Eats....

Plastic Bag Bag

A few weeks ago I was trying to find new uses for those pesky plastic grocery bags. They pile up faster than you can reuse them! Two years ago, Jonathon and I started to bring our own bags to the grocery stores and farmers markets, and it really has helped a lot. But we still manage to accumulate them somehow.

Aside from the usual trash can liner and our other common "re-uses" I wanted to find some different ideas. (In a later post, I'll list some of the re-use ideas we commonly use at our house.) I found a lot of interesting stuff, but my favorite was crocheting with plastic bags! Since we bring our own bags to the store anyway, I thought that this would be a great way to reuse them more than once without throwing them away.

I checked out a few patterns, pictures, and methods of making the yarn to get an idea of what works best, and decided to give it a try myself. A few weeks into the project, the bag is about 5 inches high with an 9 x 11 inch rectangular bottom. Ultimately, I would like it to be about 10-12 inches deep. I'm experimenting with different colors and strengths of bags, using primarily #2 plastic. (Saving #4 bags for a later project)

I consider this to be the "guinea pig" bag, just to gain experience how easy or difficult the different plastics are to work with.

The bottom is mainly Safeway bags. I sorted out the pieces that were mostly plain, beause I wanted to use the pieces with the logos for patterns later. The "stripes" mark the experiments with different plastic. The white, pearly stripes are a large clear plastic bag a friend was happy to get out of her house. It was about the size of a trash bag. The pink stripe is from an Asian grocery store. Although it was marked #2, it was definitely thinner than the Safeway bags. The last, and current stripe are newspaper bags our San Francisco Chronicle arrives in. Because they are #4 plastic, they're the most stretchy of them all.

I've received lots of eager donations of plastic from my family, friends, and neighbors. LOTS. Let's just say that I am not accepting any more donations!!! I'm up to my ears in plastic. It took me about 3 days just to sort and cut up the clean bags -- I haven't even looped them together for the yarn yet!

Eventually I'll finish this project, but as usual, I have a few projects on the go....and rarely finish them. But this time I'm determined to finish!