This work is a bit of a sketch really, it exists between many different things that I am working on, and is an attempt to connect and understand them each a little bit better.
A second source of inspiration is from a design I am working on as part of my research collaboration at MIT’s Center for Bits and Atoms. That project is moving along slowly, but one element within it felt worth appropriating it into another, smaller composition.
Have you ever noticed that a lot of lifestyle products aimed (primarily) at men are overly toothy in some way? Like, what is a tactical wallet anyway? I am not sure. It also permeates many video game and movie aesthetics as well.
While the idea of tactical aesthetic possesses the potential to be politically loaded, I am much more interested in it as an example of an organic visual language. Whatever it is, it seems interconnected with the inherent aesthetic that machine work itself lends, so it is something I feel compelled to understand, if only in a more academic way.
I understand we live in polarizing times and not everyone will be on board with a neutral exploration of this nature, but I am committed to probing this notion on my own terms; in a completely agnostic and anthropological way. So this is a first little stab at something I am trying to get my head around.
Above you can see the various stages of production. The key was keeping the ends constrained until the last step. Then I was able to insert a plug into the inner diameter and clamp the Outer diameter to it, in order to hold everything in place. Then I could turn off the end stock and free the ends of what became sort of like tines.
I am going to change some cutting operations on the next run, but the basic process was proved out.
One of my newest friends (Zach Fredin) whom I met last summer at Haystack Mountain school of Crafts, pointed me at some of his work using flexures in mechanical assemblies. The work itself is fascinating, but the thing that grabbed me most was how he used taper pins to secure his devices in place.
While the taper pin method isn’t what I ended up using with my own work, it did inspired me to think about how to use pins in interesting ways.
For this work, I instead used overlapping pins that have interlocking radii.
This takes advantage of the fact that the tines of the outer body are somewhat flexible. This flexing allows just enough movement to push smaller pins past what would otherwise be an obstructed fit. The outer assembly bends out of the way to create clearance to press the smaller pins in place and provides tension that keeps everything nicely trapped in place afterwards.
The video above helps demonstrate the assembly mechanism a little better than my writing. It picks up around the 5 minute mark.
Overall dimensions are 2.55" long, and 1.25" Diameter.
Note for Collectors: For those of you who collect, I am going to put together a pre-order for a small batch of these works for early next week. If you are interested in adding one of these to your collection. Look for details to land on Tuesday Feb 24th at 11 AM.
I will post the usual sign up links, and send an email with pricing and other information for the sale.
If there are questions or comments in the meantime, I am happy to hear them.
More soon.











