'any photos'
i blew it
Tuesday, April 8th, 2008i took a one hour hands-on glass blowing instructional today taught by austin glass artist Aaron Gross of Austin Art Glass. he runs the shop over on south congress.
aaron is a calm and highly skillful artist and teacher. i really enjoyed working with this medium and gaining respect for the ancient art technique first hand. being able to fully immerse yourself in the craft within an hour is a very cool thing…
aaron gross blowing glass with a student

aaron has great patterns throughout the shop’s grounds

wares in the kiln for the night. mine are the outer 3, lower right.

bat house take 1
Monday, April 7th, 2008the thing has arrived
Saturday, February 2nd, 2008how NOT to install your plumbing
Sunday, January 20th, 2008canine hip dysplasia
Saturday, November 24th, 2007theo has canine hip dysplasia

solatube - solar tube skylight installation how-to
Tuesday, November 13th, 2007at a recent art festival, we came across a booth showcasing solar tube lighting, something i’d been interested in for a while. we signed up for a professional installation of solatube solar lighting by solartex, a local austin dealer. i’d researched solar tube lighting in the past, but found the notion of cutting holes in my roof a bit too daunting for a self-install.
the very friendly solartex installer, aaron, mentioned he could teach me how to install them myself if i was interested. little did he realize i’d then be following him around with my cameras, documenting his every step…he was a great sport and grinned throughout my pestering.
the result is a how-to photo essay of professional solar tube installations:
first, one must choose the appropriate size solar tube for the room. solatubes come in 10 and 14 inch sizes. we decided on a 14 inch solatube for our kitchen / breakfast room area. it gets some natural lighting from north and south windows, but we end up using overhead lights in the morning and early evenings.
here’s the kitchen with natural lighting from north and south facing windows

ensure you have ample room between joists in the ceiling, then make a center point hole with a drill

draw and cut out a 14 inch circle


eyeballing the center of the circle, use a measuring tape to find a matching center point on the roof

drill a hole from the attic, then find the hole on the roof. use the dome skirting to trace another circle.


cut circle piece from the roof

installer hint — when you get close to completing the cut, grab the piece so it doesn’t fall through your ceiling below!

remove roofing nails around sides & top of hole

cut shingles to create water channel


caulk the underside of the dome housing to ensure a watertight seal. he used two tubes on this one.

lift loose shingles and place dome housing under

screw down to roof
measure distance to ceiling below

build reflective tube to length using solatube’s “spectralight infinity” sheets




here’s the solar tube with the protective plastic still in place

once plastic is removed, the tube makes a great fun-house lens

attach the top section of the tubing

insert the tube down the dome skirting & screw into place

just look at that Raybender® 3000 Technology!!!

dome’s fresnel lens

install metal reflector in northwest corner of lens to grab more rays

attach dome lens to roof mount. that’s it for the roof!

there is an amazing amount of natural sunlight pouring down the tube


slide ceiling mount up and tighten screws into place. reflective-tape the seam with the tubing in the attic.

add diffuser plate. the solartex installer gave us two options for it.
one was a flat diffusion. we chose the multi-lens option which looked waaay cooler…

using the exact same camera settings as the first kitchen photo, this photo illustrates a quite significant increase in light!

with auto settings, here’s the kitchen after installation of Solatube light

we’ve been enjoying our solatube natural lighting for weeks now. it’s amazing how much light the tube directs into the room…we still catch ourselves turning around to “hit the switch” on our way out of the room… i would highly recommend the solatube natural lighting skylights to anyone looking to add a bit of “green” lighting to their home.
the brainwave machine
Thursday, October 11th, 2007the brainwave generator glasses are complete! this rather intriguing “make” project is made using an $18 POV circuit kit at its core.
so far, using the default meditative program, it seems to work great. i can visualize an amazing array of shapes and occasionally waves of color. lots of spinning things throughout the ride…
















