En annan sorts mjukvara
I vintras gick jag virkkurs hos min mamma och sen dess har jag börjat utveckla en annan sorts “mjukvara”.
Pokey
Det här var mitt allra första projekt. Även om det inte var min tanke, tycker jag figuren liknar spöket Pokey från Pac-Man-spelen.
Jag utgick från ett mönster av Allison Hoffman. Om du vill kan du virka ditt eget monster.
Fanten
Foto: Sanna Lund
I Japan kallas små virkade leksaker för amigurumi. Den här elefanten blev en bra present till en nyanländ bebis.
Mönstret Amigurumi Elephant är designat av Móhu.
Yarny
Foto: Sanna Lund
Unravel är ett svenskutvecklat spel som gick rakt in i mitt hjärta. Så pass att jag ville göra en egen Yarny, varelsen som spelet handlar om.
Martin Sahlin, Creative Director på Coldwood, delar med sig av instruktioner för hur du virar ihop en Yarny.
A different kind of software
Last winter my mom taught me the art of crocheting. Since then I’ve started to develop a different kind of “software.”
Pokey
My first project! I didn’t intend to make it look like the ghost Pokey, from the Pacman games, but I think it does.
I used a pattern by Allison Hoffman. Why not crochet your own monster?
Fanten
Photo by: Sanna Lund
Amigurumi is the Japanese art of crocheting cute and often small creatures. This elephant made an excellent gift for a newborn baby.
Móhu designed the pattern Amigurumi Elephant.
Yarny
Photo by: Sanna Lund
The Swedish video game Unravel struck a chord in me. I fell in love so hard that I wanted to make my own Yarny, the protagonist in the story.
Martin Sahlin, Creative Director at Coldwood Interactive, shared how to make your own Yarny.
Pussel
Pussel is my electronic game with the goal of lighting up sixteen buttons. It’s easier said than done. My creation is an homage to Lights Out by American Tiger Electronics, released in 1995.
In this project, I’ve made everything. Sure, I may have “borrowed” the rules of the game, but the design of the circuit and PCB is all me. I also wrote the firmware that makes the project tick. The case that contains all the components is 3D printed in polyamide plastic.
By the way: pussel is the Swedish word for a puzzle.
Photo by: Sanna Lund