![]() ![]() We’ve been working with youth in our communities for decades. : Pete and I both have experience in education. TWIP: What made you determine that the PinBox 3000 was needed? We started going to the Chicago convention, then Pintastic, and then became enamored by the ingenuity and variety of pinball games that kept us hungry to do more with our versatile kit. We began to pursue more pinball playing around Vermont and found pockets in Burlington. We made revision after revision and refined the project into the robust little machine we have today. Our first PinBox 3000 games were getting their first major playtest, and the reviews were great. ![]() We made about 10 of those and put them out at parties and playtested them at the afterschool program I was running at the time. Our initial prototypes were nearly the size of a normal pin. Now we could make multiples instead of one sculptural piece. Pete was determined and focused to get a proof-of-concept. We had a two month artist-in-residence at the Generator Maker Space in Burlington where we learned to use the laser cutter. But I loved the idea as a “gravitational puppetry artform”. At that time, the hobby didn’t have any footing for miles around. This is Vermont, so I hadn’t touched a pinball in a decade. I remember closing down the show and saying “now we have to make a pinball game”. When I met Pete, we started making shows together and he agreed to help devise a giant show that involved hip hop, live bands, and giant puppets called Grottoblaster. Building interactive cardboard experiences was inspiring to me, and satisfied my interest in making games as theater. I had also built cardboard pinball games for an outdoor carnival that was held in the deep woods of Northern Vermont. My friends and I would build these weird and wild arcade and pinball games out of cardboard for our audiences. I co-owned a Cafe in Montpelier Vermont and we had these wild art shows. I can still hear the game: “GREEEEED!”įlash forward about 12 years and I’m a puppeteer and performing artist working in Vermont. I would go between acting classes and learn that game and I loved it. I was the only person in the place during the day. In the student union arcade there was an Addams Family pin. TWIP: What is your pinball origin story? How did you get involved in the pinball hobby? Matchstick, one of the founders of the Cardboard Teck Instantute, about how PinBox 3000 got started and the new advancements in the game modules. It also has precision apertures (acid-etched metal on vinyl disks) and 3D printed hardware for spool holders and winding knobs, which are all important components that can be transferred from one PinBox to the other.TWIP got a chance to interview Ben T. They also incorporated the film rolls as structural elements of the camera, “over-engineering to make a strong design.” While cardboard pinhole cameras are mostly either very bulky or very flimsy, the PinBox offers a good middle ground thanks to the 120 film spools making it more sturdy. “PinBox is the serious cardboard camera to truly service the DIY community by providing each backer with a complete kit AND the necessary ‘blueprint’ to precisely make additional cameras,” the campaign mentions.īut, that’s not all that Hamm Camera Company has done differently through the PinBox. According to the campaign, it comes with a PDF file with layout and instructions on A4-sized paper, so you can customize your PinBox camera as you see fit. With this interesting take on the conventional cardboard pinhole cameras, the main draw of the PinBox is a design users can quickly customize and make copies of.
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