January 4, 2009
Sometimes the grandest of efforts have somewhat deflated outcomes. Take, for example, my grandly conceived, labor intensive, engineering miracle of a holiday ornament project this year. I decided I wanted to make something interactive, something that had a kinetic three-dimensional quality, something that could involve letterpress.
Thus, after twenty or thirty hours of slicing and hemming and swearing and starting over, I had what I thought was slightly genius: do-it-yourself holiday orreries! A kit for everyone! Packaged up and tied with a bow! Flat pack! As efficient as Ikea.
But what I didn’t count on was just how careful one had to be to put these together. And how distracted groups of people can be. And how not everyone wants to spend forty minutes on Christmas day flexing fine motor skills. And tiny brads embedding themselves in rugs.
My goal was to create something entirely self-designed that didn’t use adhesives and could be packaged and mailed, if need be (it wasn’t needed, of course).
The concept was a framed orrery that had three interior orbits. Those orbits can all rotate independently so they can each have a different plane of orbit.
I spent an inordinate amount of time designing the joints that connect the two outer circles.
I used 10pt Univers and Garamond Bold to create inner “orbit lines” with hyphens and other theoretical planets with “0″s.
I had the recipients create the image on their own central bodies. Ours is a Pencil, which is fitting.
Amazing – I love it!
Hodie saw the orrery and her place in it. her response:
“You did crafts on Christmas? Lyza was handing out chores!!”
how fun! (and love the pencil)
Orrery, I read it, “The Holiday Ornery” which makes more sense, really.