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2012年11月12日星期一

Recycled Paper Changes into Flexible LED Desk Lamp

Anything that can be created from reprocessed components always grabs my eye, especially nowadays. My charitable company, RuckusRoots, is currently operating a reprocessed art system known as TRASHformation at Nightingale Center University in Los Angeles. We are regularly looking for new concepts, and so I was excited to identify this creative and very eco-friendly DIY light, designed by Instructables participant Mark Harrington Au.
Mark used a CAD system known as Autodesk Founder 2012 to draw out a 3D making of what he desired his light to look like. He then used a laser device cutter machine to cut smooth items of paper into forms that he stuck together to type the 3-dimensional light. (Here are the complete guidelines.)

Once he fitted all of the items (using simply old Elmer’s white-colored glue), Mark drilled an opening in the back again of the light and fed a little item of spiraled LED remove through the opening. Cool-running LED remove lighting are ideal for a paper light like this one, as they do not get hot enough to make a flame threat. This great LED lighting home and offices just as well as any purchased light globe, and contributes a fun, clean DIY experience to any space. I will definitely display this light to the children I’m dealing with this weeks time. Though we will not be using a laser device cutter machine, it’s a good example of one way to make a 3-dimensional form using smooth components. We have gathered a lot of tossed away paper on university, which is patiently waiting to be changed into something awesome. Remain tuned!