Making Jewellery from Old Circuit Board

Every year, we all have the same problem – what do we get our mums for mothers’ day? Though I don’t entirely approve of the concept of set days for anything, that’s another topic for another blog post. This year I decided to do something special, and what’s more special than handmade stuff?

I should explain, our family has a mascot, a cuddly fox known as Smiley. He lives in our living room, and always comes on holiday with us. So I decided to make a necklace of him. I have a fairly limited set of tools available to me, but certainly not a plotter, CNC machine or laser cutter, so this had to be hand made. Obviously I needed a template, as I’m no freehand expert. I traced a photo of Smiley on my graphics tablet to create a silhouette with simplified features.

But what material to use? At first I made a couple of prototypes with old flooring tile. It cut very quickly and cleanly with the cutting disk on a dremel, and the end result was quite decent for a first attempt. But I didn’t feel my mum would really care to wear a piece of flooring tile round her neck. An old circuit board seemed the perfect answer. The board you see there is from the back of a Samsung LCD panel, chosen for its intricacy in the traces and screen printing, as well as being very thin (under 1mm). The components came off the board very easily using a heat gun. Again the cutting disk on the dremel worked well, with edge finishing using a tapered cutter. I chose to detail one side only using an engraving ball cutter to expose the copper underneath, as the other side seemed elegant enough already with its complicated traces and screen printing.

Finally I added a 2mm leather cord from ebay, packaged the necklace in an old jeweller’s box and wrapped it in paper printed with a repeating pattern of the fox template. The one you see here is my Gran’s, I made her a similar necklace.

Both Mum and my Gran were delighted!

Helvetidoodle in the blogs!

I hate to blab on about Helvetidoodle, but this is too funny – some Japanese blog has picked up on the similarities between Helvetidoodle and Helvetica and written what seems to be (Google translate isn’t ace) a quite praising comparison:

http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&sl=ja&u=http://www.nutspress.com/2009/12/15/helvetica-and-helvetidoodle/&ei=GfZ1S_fqBoTw0wSM5sWmCQ&sa=X&oi=translate&ct=result&resnum=7&ved=0CBoQ7gEwBg&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dhelvetidoodle%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en-GB:official%26hs%3DsLR

While we’re looking at other blogs, I was pleased to see my font got chosen for Font Friday in December at Poppytalk:

http://poppytalk.blogspot.com/2009/12/font-friday.html

I don’t want to seem vain, but this is fascinating!

Helvetidoodle on tour

Quite amusingly, I recently received an email from an art student in San Francisco who wanted to tell me she’s using my typeface in a project for the San Francisco Art Institute. You can see how she and her fellow student used it at their website: www.loppedoff.com (It’s probably not really safe for work).

I particularly like the extremely tight cropping of the text, while still retaining readability, to represent the ‘lopped off’ theme. This is exactly the way I envisioned the typeface being used, with headers in Helvetidoodle and body text in Helvetica so as not to look too busy.

Helvetidoodle passes 20,000 downloads

The other day I noticed on my dafont.com profile that Helvetidoodle has passed the 20,000 downloads milestone, all within two months of it being released! This is way more than I ever expected to get – and I’m delighted with the ways it’s already been used by those out there. It’s even earned me 99p so far from a donation!

Helvetidoodle at dafont.com: http://www.dafont.com/helvetidoodle-by-ed-t.font