Paperclip Trebuchet
Project Maker: Alex Palfreman-Brown
Project Link: hsmag.cc/EvJBQZ
Alex Palfreman-Brown has the perfect cure for cubicle boredom. All you need is a handful of paper clips and a pair of pliers. You can use them, together with some other pieces of office stationery, to build a trebuchet that’s powerful enough to hurl balls of Blu-Tack across the cubicles and wage a war on your colleagues.
Alex shows you how to first straighten the paper clips and then intricately shape them into the swinging arm, the axle, the trigger, and other components of the trebuchet. You then assemble all of them on a piece of corrugated card, together with ballast (Alex uses a bunch of batteries), roll pea-sized drops of Blu-Tack into balls along with some string, and fire away. The whole contraption takes about an hour to put together.
The build is so popular that it has earned Alex several Instructables.com Pro memberships, which he gives away as competition prizes in the hackspace he helps run. The evil mastermind is fully aware of the sinister implications of his war machine: “If I’m ever feeling glum, I just consider how many man-hours have been lost internationally to bored office workers building my trebuchet. That always puts a smile on my face.”
Paperclip Sculptures
Project Maker: Thomasin Durgin
Project Link: hsmag.cc/jiKLUp
Thomasin Durgin is a teaching artist in Memphis, Tennessee and fabricates jewellery using all kinds of metals. Almost a decade ago she found herself in a cubicle in a job that was “not a good fit” for her. So she started creating art from the materials readily available in her workspace – paper clips.
To make these sculptures, Thomasin adopted the traditional basket weaving techniques to work with paper clips. She outlined the shape and then drilled holes into a wooden base and glued several 12-inch-high heavy-gauge wires into them. She then threaded two of these wires into each paper clip, sliding them down and staggering them into rows. This particular sculpture took over 2000 paper clips. Commenting on a photo of her sculpture, Thomasin writes that the process is rather limiting: “I’d like to adapt true basketry techniques to be able to ditch the wood and create more rounded vessels, spheres, etc. Then I can combine both methods to make more complex structures.”
Miniature Weapons
Project Maker: Brett
Project Link: hsmag.cc/grgFjq
Paperclips are a wonderful medium to express yourself creatively. Their malleable nature allows them to be bent into all kinds of shapes that can be held over a period of time thanks to their sturdiness. Armed with a pair of needle-nose pliers and some glue, Brett took some paper clips and transformed them into beautiful miniature weapons.
Brett hasn’t published the procedure for sculpting the paper clip armoury, but you can reverse-engineer his process thanks to the excellent macro photographs of the creations by Brett’s friend, Dan Nicholas. Dan’s images of Brett’s awe-inspiring work are detailed enough to help you make out each and every bend, turn, and twist of the paper clips. If you’re like us, all it’ll take is one look at Brett’s rudimentary weapons and you’ll be instantly compelled to try your hand at creating them.
Metal Race Game
Project Maker: hsmag.cc/rkoNAm
Project Link: hsmag.cc/rkoNAm
A talk on the rise of mobile gaming back in 2009 inspired game designer Greg Borenstein to build a physical one-dimensional scrolling game based on a racing game he played on the TI-83 series of graphing calculators. In his version, the player’s car essentially stays in place while the track scrolls from right to left at a constant rate. The player can move the car up and down to navigate the twists and turns of the circuit.
Greg used a couple of motors to move the car and the track that was made out of paper clips. A triangular piece of metal serves as the car and when it comes into contact with the paper clip circuit, they close a switch that triggers a buzzer indicating a crash and the end of the game. Greg has detailed the mechanical and electrical parts of the build in a couple of blog posts and also published a video of the whole contraption in action.
Paperclip Jewellery
Project Maker: Lina Darnell
Project Link: hsmag.cc/oAlbCs
Lina is a master crafter and a mum of two young kids. Inspired by a blog post on another website, Lina engages her kids creatively by using a bunch of paper clips and some duct tape to design some simple pieces of jewellery. She hooks paper clips together to the desired length of the necklace or bracelet and then wraps about an inch of tape around the middle of each clip.
While it sounds simple, the end result is an attractive trinket. Lina’s post is dotted with images and she also discusses ideas to extend the simple designs by adding more paper clips and dangling beads and small pendants to the end. “This is a great craft for summer camps, scouts, or simply an afternoon at home,” writes Lina, whose kids love the paper clip jewellery.