Last Week Tonight is a hilarious, informative, and often controversial satirical late night news program on HBO. That's a lot of adjectives. It's also a really good television program. I usually DVR it on Sunday so I can watch it Monday morning.
This morning I received a message from a customer that one of my designs was used doing a segment on the show. Which design? See for yourself around 12 minutes and 30 seconds into the segment.
Those are definitely our vintage steel IUD earrings! They are available on our Etsy store for $25 + shipping. Here's a link. Ten percent of the the profits from every sale from our collection of IUD jewelry goes to Planned parenthood.
These earrings are 3D printed in bronze infused steel and have nickel free hooks. They are also available in cast metal and nylon.
Why did we make these IUD Earrings? The 2016 election. On November 9th by noon on the day after the election, Google searches for IUDs were spiking—one of the most popular search terms overnight was, “Get an IUD now.”
These IUD earrings were made to be worn to show that any changes Trump and the GOP might make negatively effecting women's reproductive issues would be met with protest. It's a small thing but small things can lead to big changes - both political parties believe that. You know where we stand.
Thank you Last Week Tonight and thank you John Oliver for highlighting the importance of women’s reproductive freedom. And also thanks for using our IUD earrings to illustrate the point!
Earlier this year, a gentleman in Australia asked if I would be able to re-create a ring he lost.He had seen my Control-Alt-Delete and Esc statement rings. “Could I make a custom Esc ring in cast silver with a working mechanism?”I thought it would be an interesting challenge. I asked for a photo of what he had in mind and told him that I’d have to do some research. After some poking around on how keyboard keys actually work, I decided I would be able to do it. With prototyping and testing I’d probably have a working ring in a few weeks.I told him as much and he was good with this somewhat indefinite timeline. So my quest to create a working cast metal keyboard ring began!
One of the first things I did was look at old keyboard designs.The IBM Model M and F keyboard kept on appearing.It’s a 3 piece system which consists of a spring+hammer, a barrel, and a stem (which is the underside of the actual key). It’s a simple and robust design that makes a satisfying clickety clack when typing.
I found a guy on eBay that sold keyboard parts and ordered some.My thinking was that I’d attach the hammer and barrel parts to a custom ring and then attach the cast key into the actual keyboard part.Even if it wasn’t how I ended up going - and it wasn’t - it would give me a starting point and a working design to study.
When the keyboard parts arrived, I got out my trusty digital calipers and measured each part every which way. I took all those measurements and re-created the design in Rhino3D (a 3D design program).I discovered that while Frankensteining a ring like this might work, it would look about as pretty as the eponymous monster.For one thing the key sat very high and the hammer and barrel were much wider than I had planned.
Top
Side Profile
Front Profile
3/4 Profile
Not one to give up, I sawed one of the keyboard mechanisms to make it narrower and make the key sit lower. But the more I altered the original mechanism the more I decided that this approach wouldn’t be feasible.I wanted to make a quality ring and bits of sawed off plastic hidden by sterling silver didn’t scream quality.I’d have to design my own keyboard mechanism. I was going to come up with something that IBM probably had a team of engineers working on for months. Next time you look at a keyboard really think about just how much thought went into it.
I wasn’t completely in the dark. The IBM keyboard mechanism inspired many different approaches.I liked the barrel concept since it gave the design a platform for stability.How would I adapt that design into something that would work in cast silver?How would I get everything to snap into place and hold together under the tension of a spring?What kind of spring would I use?I didn’t want a key that didn’t feel like a keyboard key when it was pressed. Metal also doesn’t have the same physical properties as plastic — it would behave slightly differently when all the parts were assembled.
This project presented interesting and challenging problems to solve.I was having a lot of fun.
Version. 2.5
While all this was going on I also had to come up with the ring itself.My customer had sent me some photos and I also had the CAD models of my other keyboard rings. In the end, the ring and the “Esc key” were not that hard to design.The only real thing I really had to keep in mind was the example photo, the ring size, and how I wanted the Esc key to look.It got trickier when I had to figure out how much play up and down I wanted on the key.The play would depend not only on the internal mechanism but also the the walls of the key.I needed to get a prototype made.
I took my first crack at a keyboard mechanism, then another, and another until I came up with something I thought would work. I sent that model over to a service bureau to get it 3D printed in SLS nylon.Nylon is a good prototyping material because it’s inexpensive and the tolerances are fairly close to those of cast metals.A week or two later I got the printed model back.
While waiting for the nylon print to arrive I collected a number of springs of various lengths, diameters, and springiness. When the print arrived I immediately started putting the whole thing together.It sort of worked and sort of didn’t.With a weak spring the ring would function but it felt sort of limp.With a stronger spring the mechanism would rock and the key would tilt. I had inadvertently made a single axis inside the key, an improper designed.It only had locking tabs on two sides, similar to the IBM design.The difference being the strength of the spring and that the barrel had runners along the inside that seated the key nicely into the barrel and gave it a track to run up and down on.My design didn’t have that because I couldn’t cast details that fine.
Back on Rhino I decided to flip my design upside down, put two more locking tabs, andadded a guidance barrel that housed the spring - this part served as a track for a barrel on the key and the ring. I ordered the nylon print and after about a week it showed up ... and worked exactly as expected!
Being nylon, it didn’tfunction exactly as it would for metal but I knew ultimately this design would be function well. Why?Because I planned on using the key itself as a stressed member of the design. There were four locking tabs located around the barrel and close to the sides of the key.Around the barrel were four slots.The tabs snap into the slots and by slightly bending the sides of the key the tabs are forced to bend and bite into the slots!
When the silver key came back from the casting house I put the goldilocks spring in the ring and snapped everything together.I tested it to make sure it worked and then pushed the sides of the key in slightly and as expected, it locked the tabs into place and the ring was complete.
01. Version One in SLS Nylon
02. Penultimate Version in SLS Nylon
03. .925 Sterling Final Cast with Patina
04. Underside of ESC
05. Testing Springs
06. Final Spring
07. Nylon Test in Silver
08. Various Versions
A perfectly functional Esc key ring in cast silver.
In 2018 on Valentines Day a massacre occurred at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. A gunman opened fire and murdered seventeen students and staff members and injured seventeen others.
The Wonder Women Project is an attempt at education - my education at the very least. I want to learn more about amazing female inventors, scholars, and minds because I believe it’s good to learn about them.When I learn about someone amazing, I want to sharethat knowledge with all of you.
I believe that the more role models we have to inspire great things in us the better the world can be.
Amazing women should inspire young girls to be amazing and inspiring women.Being female shouldn’t get in the way of success.It shouldn’t be a hardship or something to overcome.Doing a great deed or creating an amazing device shouldn’t have to be prefaced with the phrase “despite being a woman.” Too many times it is, especially in the past when women had to toil to get their ideas and talents across in a male-dominated society.
We need to see women as more than victims, objects, or "other."
We need to see women as heroes.
Apple Computer "Think Different" poster featuring Amelia Earhart. This poster is framed and hangs in my office.
Amazing women should inspire young boys to become amazing and inspiring men.It is OK for women to inspire men; for women to be heroes.Young boys should put posters of women on their walls - not as pinups - so that by looking up at the poster before they go to bed they will be inspired and reminded that by working hard they can achieve their goals. Female role models should be seen and emulated by both girls AND boys.
Amazing women should inspire us all. It should be absolutely normal to see women in this way.