Medfield Library Makerspace Blog – Let’s Talk About Making!

Welcome back to the Makerspace Blog! Today I want to tell you about the awesome screen printing workshop we held in the library a few weeks ago.  As you probably know, screen printing is the technique used to put images onto t-shirts but it can also be used to print on paper to make things like flyers, holiday cards, and invitations.  As I long for the days of decorating an old shoebox and finding it stuffed full of cards and candy from all my friends, I decided we should print Valentines!  Why should kids get to have all the fun, right?

The Makerspace is outfitted with a Silhouette Vinyl Cutter, which is basically a big sticker maker that can cut decals 12” wide by as-long-as-your-little-heart-desires. It’s easy to import images downloaded from the internet as well as your own designs, and text-based compositions can be whipped up in no time!  I made vinyl stencils and stuck them to the printing screens ahead of time.  Participants then teamed up and took turns holding the screen while their partner used a squeegee to drag ink across it.  Just like using a cardboard stencil with a can of spray paint, the vinyl stencil protects the paper or fabric under the screen from the ink so it only seeps through the screen where intended. So easy!

 

We made a great variety of prints that night using plain and patterned paper, and everyone had a stack of Valentines to take home with them.  Best of all, two of the workshop participants came back the very next night, designed a decal on the computer, cut it out, made a screen and printed their design onto fabric which they then took home and sewed into pillows!  Seeing those two put their new skills to use was an even better treat for me than finding a shoebox full of chocolate!

Thanks for stopping by to see what we’ve been up to in the Makerspace.  I’ll be sure to post again next week.  In the meantime, be sure to check out our events page…the April workshop schedule will be up soon and (surprise!) we are adding daytime classes into the mix!

Read Something for Read Across America Week!

Celebrate Dr. Seuss’ birthday this year, on Read Across America Day (March 2nd) and share a book from childhood that meant the most to you! The National Education Association (NEA) wants you to take a picture with the book of your choice and post your “shelfie” on a public social media platform. When you post your photo using #Shelfie and #ReadAcrossAmerica, NEA will share your creative submission on their social channels and feature it on their website.

Medfield Library Makerspace Blog-Let’s Talk About Making!

Makerspaces are popping up all over the place these days–in schools and universities, in community centers and, of course, in public libraries, but what exactly are they? Generally speaking, they are spaces equipped with stuff for, well…MAKING!

In the Medfield Public Library Makerspace we have two Lulzbot 3-D Printers, two Mac computers loaded with the full Adobe Suite including Photoshop and InDesign, a Silhouette Vinyl Cutter, a button maker, a sewing machine and much more. We also have tools and supplies for needle crafts, jewelry making and weaving.

We offer evening and daytime classes for adults each week that center around the use of our equipment (see our Events page to sign up!)

A group photo from our first ever Makerspace workshop last fall. This glass etching class was such a hit we’re having another one next week!

On Monday, Wednesday and Thursday afternoons we have staffed hours  in the Makerspace             (M/W 3-5 p.m. & Th 4-6 p.m.) so that patrons can try the equipment with our experienced staff on hand to answer questions. We also set up a “Craft of the Day” during these times so that kids under 15 (who would normally need a parent or guardian present to be in the Makerspace) can try the equipment, too.

I’m excited to be starting a weekly blog here at the Medfield Public Library website that will highlight some of the learning, collaborating, designing, and making that is happening in our Makerspace. My hope is to show you what is possible with the incredible tools you have at your disposal here, and to inspire you to get making!

Next week’s post will be about our recent screen printing workshop which utilized the vinyl cutter and traditional screen printing techniques.

See you soon,
Bri
Assistant Adult Services & Technology Librarian

Debut Thriller

A. J. Finn is wrote a thriller that has captured the book world. A Woman in the Window is about child psychologist Dr. Anna Fox who is also agoraphobic. She sits at her apartment window and observes her neighbors and sometimes takes photographs.  A new family has moved in across the street who has captured Anna’s attention. What occurs and what Anna sees makes for a page turning thriller.

A book not to miss!

I absolutely enjoyed Celeste Ng’s newest book, Little Fires Everywhere. The book centers around mother-daughter relationships in two different families. The families are very different, but in the end it is clear that the bond between mothers and daughters is very complicated. Everything I Never Told You is Ng’s first book and is also a good read.

A Weird and Wonderful Book

Weird and really wonderfully written with evocative descriptions, this book is filled with engaging if not quite likeable characters. A satire, this book shifts between lightness and sincerity. It may not be everyone’s taste, but this tale — about a woman who takes a job as “Emotional Girlfriend” for a famous actor as part of his project to take all of the different roles played by a girlfriend and hire different women to take them on — sure was mine.

This book explores ideas around celebrity, having personal connections after trauma, and what it means to be living in what you feel is a broken body, and again, does so with absolutely gorgeous sentences.

Reviewed by Pam

A Thrilling Read!

A thrilling story of survival and coming to terms with one’s background and biology, this book tackles tough subjects while maintaining a breakneck pace of readability. The unique voice of the narrator captured this evocative, brutal, and believable story of a woman, on the hunt for her father, who had abducted her mother as a teenager and kept her captive for more than a decade. Now, her father has escaped from prison, and our narrator is the only one with the wilderness skills and personal connection to track him down.

I am not normally a thriller person, but this book grabbed me right from the beginning and kept a tight hold until the very end.

Reviewed by Pam

Thought provoking!

Is our society toxic to our own happiness?  Why do soldiers in war-torn countries have less incidents of PTSD than our own?  Sebastian Junger (A Perfect Storm, Fire, A Death in Belmont), draws conclusions based on his experiences in Middle Eastern war zones and tribal societies.  The reader comes away with a better understanding of why in a society with so many resources, we fail to heal our most vuneralbe compatriots. Fascinating!

A Timely Story

In Picoult’s latest novel, race relation is explored. Ruth Jefferson, an African American labor and delivery nurse at a CT hospital is ordered by parents of a newborn not to touch their baby. The parents are white supremacists, thus Ruth is dismisses from the baby’s care. What follows is a nightmare for both Ruth and the parents and the hospital. This is a very compelling read with strong plot and characters.