How I made my drawing machine, and in the process made artists obsolete. When I first moved into my new studio, I had no important projects looming, and wasn't yet comfortable in the space. I built this "Drawing Machine" so that I could be productive, but not really. I would set it up, turn it on and then read Sculpture Magazine for a while as the machine did its jiggly business. This project was built using junk found around the studio for a cost of $0.00. It utilizes an old power drill with an offset cam in the chuck for motion.
 
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Step 1: The Machine

offset cams.jpg
hole layout.jpg
Essentially, it's a power drill with an offset cam in the chuck clamped to a box. The cams were made using a hole saw on 1/8 inch copper sheet, with a thick copper stem hard soldered off center. A good deal of flexibility is available in this detail, as a lot of cam configurations can be used. The pics make it pretty clear how the rest of the thing is made. It's not rocket science, it's art.
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roboman2444 says: Mar 13, 2010. 12:56 PM
Cool, but it looks as thought the stylus hugs the wall, maybe making it so the paper is curved so its slightly lower in the center will help.
felixfatts says: Apr 13, 2009. 3:35 PM
you could easily make this concept more "artistic" by make the amount of vibration variable, and putting a good magnet in the stylus by which you can loosely direct the path of the stylus. or have the center of the stylus be paint and the tips be straws with flow control
natethegreat88 says: Mar 14, 2009. 1:06 PM
These look more like "How to make your own mace" out of household items or like just replace those pencils with some nails and you have a deadly weapon that could possibly be a shuriken type weapon.
firesketch says: Sep 2, 2008. 7:48 AM
Any pics with the coloured pencils? Iz nize! : D
olof.net says: Aug 10, 2008. 3:54 PM
you should check out my website, http://www.oolf.net . I started building similar drawing machines, but later found other great ways of visualizing stuff, like wind and so forth. Really nice works
kylemcdonald says: Aug 3, 2008. 5:59 PM
This is a really beautiful example of physical generative art. I'd like to see some larger scale and multi-colored drawings.
hay_jumper (author) says: Jan 11, 2007. 9:16 PM
Thank you all for the great feedback and ideas. As I said, the potential for this idea is limitless, and you all have given me some great ideas.

The only problem I have found with this project is that with out the correct blend of elements, the drawings might come out looking very muddy. Not that there is anything wrong with muddy. I, however, lean heavily towards the minimalists and the abstract expressionists. Not so much the color-field types. But that is an issue of personal taste.

Screaminscott mentioned a bit about putting a raised design underneath which I liked. It is not really noticeable in the photo of the drawing (let's call it) "diagonal marks", but the texture if the wood underneath does show, so that idea yields positive results.

Kiteman, I'm not sure your ball-bearing idea would work so well, as the motion of the machine isn't so violent that a copper sheet would be marred. I could be wrong, and I would love to see images of you proving me wrong.

Mamofo: http://animalsart.ru/chimpanzee1.htm Yes, they can.
xxxafterglow in reply to hay_jumperApr 10, 2008. 7:12 PM
Maybe the key to making it minimalist is to restrict either the movement of the stylus (e.g. bigger stylus), the number of markmakers (less pencils) or the amount of time spent. Or you know, sharpen the pencils a lot or use really hard 8Hs or 16Hs. Maybe if there were a way to rig the motion-maker way up high and have the stylus swinging from a string - similar idea but you are limited only by the size of your studio and maybe you'll have to get some friends to grab/release the stylus. Wow this was posted more than a year ago. How's the machine doing?
pachanka says: Apr 11, 2007. 8:09 AM
"art weapon", now thats a cool concept
Tobita in reply to pachankaMar 20, 2008. 4:04 PM
for the art-attack tv series:P
heavy.metal.nguyen says: Feb 6, 2008. 4:56 PM
Hasn't this been posted already? It's nice though.
hay_jumper (author) in reply to heavy.metal.nguyenFeb 6, 2008. 9:16 PM
Yeah, I posted it over a year ago, it just got featured (again) by the editing staff. Thanks for your astute observation.
heavy.metal.nguyen in reply to hay_jumperFeb 7, 2008. 2:28 PM
Yeah I was wondering why it was at the front of the list. Nice word: astute. Have to use that more often. Makes me sound smart.
Zengineer1618 says: Feb 6, 2008. 5:44 AM
Interesting. What if you didn't use a drill ,but instead put the fence assembly on top of a big speaker and then played music /noise/vocals through the speaker? I wonder what kind of images the speaker vibes would create?
technoplastique says: Oct 16, 2007. 7:23 PM
I really love the idea of using something like this in a collage or as the base for a drawing. You could use colored pencils. Or exacto knives and film a horror film...
Lord Of Mystra says: Sep 14, 2007. 12:48 PM
very cool! *goes drillnapping*
malenamalena says: Aug 27, 2007. 4:03 PM
um, i take it you are an artist? i teach at a university and am guessing you know about the 'historical' drawing machines, no? if you want, i can refer you to artists who have done this in decades past...but if you read sculpture mag then you probably already know???
Spl1nt3rC3ll says: Jul 8, 2007. 11:37 PM
Canookian says: Jun 3, 2007. 2:47 AM
Heh. At first glance, I'd thought that you've come up with a contraption from Stephen King's 'The Tommyknockers'
Kiteman says: Jan 7, 2007. 2:29 PM
Another styus idea: use a hot pin to poke holes in a ping-pong ball, then use a sringe to fill it with pigment of some kind (paint, ink, etc). If it drainss out too quickly, add cornflower to thicken it. Or why not colour in the whole sheet of paper with pencil, then let a heavy eraser bounce around in there for a while? Or put a handful of iron filings in there for a while, then switch it off and mist with water. Lay another sheet of damp paper over the top, then leave the "sandwich" in a plastic bag for a day or two until the filings rust and stain the paper - you will have a pair of mirror images - then let the paper dry and brush the filings off.
StepsoftheSun in reply to KitemanJan 18, 2007. 8:37 PM
Various hues of thickened paint in several ping-pong balls sounds like a great idea! Have you tried building one of these, Kiteman? And as an aside to the author, "Dueling Styluses--a Battle of Wills" had me laughing so hard...
Kiteman in reply to StepsoftheSunJan 19, 2007. 10:28 AM
No, my Making is usually limited to ideas by lack of space and excess of kack-handedness.
StepsoftheSun in reply to KitemanMay 24, 2007. 11:50 PM
Haha, sorry to hear that.
abbiegrrl says: May 8, 2007. 9:13 AM
Wow, that reminds me of a....plasma-something from an old sci-fi movie! ;o) cool idea.
T3h_Muffinator says: Apr 8, 2007. 9:34 AM
Hey! That's quite interesting! Nice job man! you should crush up some chalk and put it in between two pieces of paper, and let one of your styluses bounce around. The chalk would get compressed and smudge on the paper, resulting in a very original piece of art!
poulw says: Mar 19, 2007. 1:28 PM
As process documentation it does hold some interest. However the beat of the drill is a single note thing and therefore the picts don't hold reward prolonged attention. Find a way to make this polyrhythmic and you'll be on to something. ps- get a job (kidding) yur pal paul
royalestel says: Jan 22, 2007. 3:06 PM
hayjumper, I want to cultivate as much creativity as you've obviously got. Any hints?
royalestel in reply to royalestelFeb 27, 2007. 11:32 AM
No sarcasm. I really think this is very creative and I'd like to know if you have any hints on how to cultivate creativity in one's self.
Fenwick says: Feb 26, 2007. 10:44 AM
You could put coasters under the paper and get rings. That's be cool.
sinner_93 says: Feb 24, 2007. 11:45 AM
why dont u patent this wonderful machine? you can fill some paint in ping pong ball and attach a few straws.....
NumberX says: Feb 22, 2007. 8:38 PM
I assume that those cams are da bomb? (Get it? You named them Fat Man and Little Boy.)
hlumbard says: Feb 21, 2007. 9:14 PM
I want to see a youtube vid of this thing!
lemonie says: Feb 12, 2007. 3:24 PM
For another idea - heat-sensitive (e.g. facsimile) paper and a hot-lump (of e.g. charcoal). You would cover the paper in aluminium foil to prevent burning & ash/carbon deposits. Then again, regular unprotected paper would produce something interesting(?)
pfred1 says: Jan 13, 2007. 1:14 PM
It looks like toast!
frankenchicken says: Jan 11, 2007. 5:23 PM
nifty idea... One suggestion to possibly make it even better... You should try making your "pencil ball" thingy with different colors. So when it is running, you will get different "pixels" and it would possibly be able to be even more Rorschach like (you know the ink blot guy.. Rorschach's ink blot tests).
screaminscott says: Jan 9, 2007. 12:14 PM
Another idea might be to put a rasied design under the paper, and see how that affects the marks on top of the paper. It might come out something like a rubbing or something completely unexpected.
Kiteman in reply to screaminscottJan 11, 2007. 7:12 AM
How about a compressible pad (like a piece of camping roll-mat), laid over with a sheet of copper? Replace the stylus with a ball-bearing, and hammer out your design.
crapflinger says: Jan 9, 2007. 4:03 PM
throw a couple (or more) charcoals (the art kind OR the BBQ kind) or pastels in there and let them rattle around paint your cat's feet then throw it in the box on top...turn the drill on (this has the added bonus of making nice designs on your floor/carpet/furniture/ceiling/face as well) it would also be nifty to keep the drill on the base the way it is to offer the up and down vibration...but then maybe use another drill with another offset cam pointing upwards (instead of horrizontal like you have the one in the base) that would cause the entire top of the contraption (you'd have to make a seperate top for the tray) to move around in a circle...adding a bit more randomness to the mix
timbudtwo says: Jan 8, 2007. 9:27 PM
Very creative, but why?
mabufo says: Jan 8, 2007. 7:05 PM
Chimps can paint.
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