Dragon of Recursion / Light Show / Post-it Portraits

7 days, 47438 pen strokes :\. Lara’s work and a recurring dragon on this blog :). I sped up the machine to make it 7 days instead of 10, so it’s slightly more inaccurate, but more importantly I failed to anticipate that ink would run out faster. I used to have about 1.5 days between pen swaps, here it’s barely above 1 day. No harm done I got there in time, but I should have thought about it when I adjusted speed.

I lined it up with a big public event and tons of people got to see it.

No sure if there’s anything more to say about lasers & post-it portraits, it was the now usual formula. I’ve enhanced the pipeline some to do auto-face-cropping as it is a step we usually waste lots of time on. Esther & I rehearsed over the week end. She runs the operation during the event.

Some recurring questions I get asked at these events:

“What are the machines for normally?” Nothing, their sole purpose is to drag pens and shine cat lasers.

“Is this your job?” Nope, just a side quest.

“So how does this work?” I try to see what part they’re interested in before I launch into a 3 hour tirade :).

“Did you build this?” yes.

It’s very gratifying to see people stare at your work for a while. You can see the gears turning in their heads. I’ll sit by the big machine sometimes to watch people’s reaction to it. When I swap its pen people will come up and tell me how much they like it. I’m just glad for having the opportunity to do something cool in the world.

Boiling Quarters

I spent the whole week end in the sugar house, maple trees have been relentless this past week. We have ~5 gallons of syrup canned so far with at least 3 more coming. The smells are incredible in the Spring, Winter makes you forget that the world has any smell at all. Wet soil hits the hardest after a long Winter, and it’s quickly followed by pine smoke and sweet sap.

Refining the Formula

I was invited back to the science museum to do something cool with my machines. Any time I do a public event it’s an opportunity to figure out what’s engaging and do better the next time around.

I was maybe a little too motivated and brought several machines, almost my whole apparatus, and deployed them in various modes. 1 PewtyBot, 1 Mirror PewtyBot, 1 PlottyBot & 1 SkecthyBot doing portraits, and 1 PewtyBot people could control with their phones. The laser portraits worked wonders again, but the original PlottyBot drawing post-it portraits worked even better.

People were clearly keen on getting a tangible souvenir from the evening. Having a robot draw their portraits on a Post-it note struck a chord hard. I think what I’ve learned from this event is that while the lasers throw a lot of pazzazz at you, they are more complex machines that most people don’t try to engage with beyond taking in the light show. While a pen based machine is doing the same thing you’d do with your hand so it’s more approachable to be curious about. As usual a small fraction of them were fixated beyond reason on watching the machine at work. There has to be a “drawing automaton obsession” gene present in ~10% of the population.

Unfortunately, I only had one PlottyBot doing the Post-it portraits, and they take much longer than the lasers so I spent much of the evening trying to keep track of a queue of people who wanted one.

I built 2 4’x4′ photoluminescent paper holders so I could deploy this easier. In the past, finding a decent spot on a wall for the rolls and unrolling them was difficult and time consuming. I also have plans for doing random outside events at dusk in random places this Summer, which is why having something deployable was worth the construction effort. I tried it some already at home last Summer and it’s kind of cool to have the lasers go on a warm Summer night.

I had several people ask me if this was AI :), this seems to have become the go-to explanation for anything tech based that can’t be explained easily. Much like Clarke’s law that “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic”, only now it’s AI instead of magic. I’d respond that it was just good old organic grain-raised free-range “I”.

As usual, it was very hard to capture the coolness while manning it so I don’t have much visuals to represent what went on. Ultimately it’s just me running 5 machines, a software stack and talking a lot. Suffice it to say people were into it and I’m emboldened to keep trying public events. Fun times!

Fancy Meerers

The mirror based PewtyBot proved conclusive enough but since the laser is reflected twice, a degradation is clear on the medium if the mirrors aren’t high quality. Clearly the cheap plastic ones I got to test with aren’t, but they served their purpose. With much research on mirror specs & bounding agents, I went ahead and spent $70 on two tiny “surface first enhanced aluminum” mirrors. Once again, I forgot everything about my high school physics lessons, but some vague notions are left to help me navigate through specs. And this being 2026, of course there’s a website dedicated to optics of all sorts I can buy any sort of mirror from. The modern world has its flaws, but access to information and stuff is definitely covered.

These new fancy mirrors are extremely crisp. Unfortunately, one of them slid on the epoxy as it cured, this won’t impact use but I’m bummed for I really did all I could to get everything perfect.

I tested the upgraded machine and it performed just as well as before, but the laser pointer was pristine as it hit the medium. This might not be a $70 improvement, but if I’m going to build a machine it’s hard to leave it lacking. The kids have been curious about this new development, it’s always fun to see the gears turn when they engage.

Whoosh

He watched the Olympics and created all sorts of jumps and grinds.

The Deader the Better

The wood piles are reaching their ends so it’s time to supplement them with dead (dry) stuff from the forest. We’ve gone through a lot of wood this Winter.