Gallery of Christine Edison
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- spiritofcat
- Senior Member
- Posts: 473
- Joined: January 3rd, 2007, 12:54 am
- Location: Sydney, Australia
Waterbomb modular instructions
Well been a long bit but here are some instructions for a modular unit, I don't include assembly, but you may be able to figure it out from the pictures.
http://cedison.wordpress.com/2009/12/27 ... tructions/

Other things I've been playing with
Backlit dragon

Corrugated automata

Curved piece

Modular with instructions

instructions
http://cedison.wordpress.com/2009/08/26 ... ks-i-like/
http://cedison.wordpress.com/2009/12/27 ... tructions/

Other things I've been playing with
Backlit dragon

Corrugated automata

Curved piece

Modular with instructions

instructions
http://cedison.wordpress.com/2009/08/26 ... ks-i-like/
Hi Christine,
I love you dragon-lampshade you're working on. I saw it on flickr and I am wondering, if you are sewing the narrow parts together.
It looks like fine sewing machine stitches. Am I right? How do you do it and what kind of paper do you use? I can imagine elephanthide would be much too thick for sewing it with a machine...
bye Tine
I love you dragon-lampshade you're working on. I saw it on flickr and I am wondering, if you are sewing the narrow parts together.
It looks like fine sewing machine stitches. Am I right? How do you do it and what kind of paper do you use? I can imagine elephanthide would be much too thick for sewing it with a machine...
bye Tine
~~* my weblog "Kalami" *~~
Edges
Thanks Tine,
While you can constrain edges by folding over, I sewed them on a regular sewing machine with a pink thread. The paper was from a store that is no longer around so I am not sure of the type, but it had a high fiber content and functioned similar to fabric when sewn. You can sew eh but for this I avoided it since the tension would be far to great for this particular project.
Best,
Christine
While you can constrain edges by folding over, I sewed them on a regular sewing machine with a pink thread. The paper was from a store that is no longer around so I am not sure of the type, but it had a high fiber content and functioned similar to fabric when sewn. You can sew eh but for this I avoided it since the tension would be far to great for this particular project.
Best,
Christine
Foiled curvature
Well not what I wanted but what ended up with an idea, original paper to short second picture is the first attempt the other two show what I ended up doing with it...





