The present disclosure relates to mechanical devices for aiding in the production of two-dimensional artwork.
Historically, Spin Art was a County Fair activity staple. A spin-art device included an array of drums, each holding a motor, and a frame that could hold a pre-cut clay-coated chip-board rectangle. An operator would start the motor, allowing artists to pour paints onto the spinning rectangle from a safe distance. Spin Art appeared as a blurring disc during the creative process. Only when the spinning rectangle finally stopped, could the artist view the created work.
It was common to use volatile, industrial paints to speed the drying process, in order to offer the customer a quick-drying piece of artwork. Spin Art faced obsoletion when new environmental regulations stopped the use of volatile solvent type paints around humans. The toy industry then developed low-power spin-art toys using safe non-toxic paints, and card stock.
The Strobe Spin Art apparatus provided here is a new apparatus for making traditional Spin Art. It employs precise stroboscopic illumination upon a spinning substrate held safely captive in an appropriate platen. The spinning substrate, timed to stroboscopic illumination, appears stationary to the Artist's eye during the artistic process, allowing that artist to create, observe, modify, and finish their work of art in real time. The stroboscopic illumination may be of a specific luminosity and duration.
That artistic process may use a variety of pigments, specific, e.g., to individual substrates. The apparatus may include specifically designed depositors, including deposition pattern dies, for different creative effects. Substrates may vary, and specific pigments, (e.g., paints, inks, dyes, and glazes, etc.) may also vary, depending upon the application and the substrate. The Apparatus can be used with UV— curable pigments to quickly cure the artist's finished work product into a smear-free take-home art object. A safe U.V. Interlock can be included.
Strobe Spin Art provides potential advantages, not least, in the way it makes visible the artistic process of deposition of pigments upon a rotating substrate. That is, in its use of precise synchronous stroboscopic illumination to interpolate the rotating substrate into an apparent null state of rotational moment, it can enable the artist to view the artwork being made in real time, as a static image, and not as a spinning blur.
In embodiments, the Strobe Spin Art apparatus can be programmed to time the arrival of pigment materials onto defined areas of the substrate, thus offering more precision control of deposition.
In embodiments, Strobe Spin Art can potentially accommodate a variety of pigments and paints, as well as dye stuffs, glazes, etc., deposited upon rotating substrates using a variety of depositors designed to work in conjunction, and a variety of substrates, ceramic, organic or synthetic.
In embodiments, Strobe Spin Art can be designed to illuminate across the visible spectrum, including UV portions of the spectrum for special effects.
In embodiments, Strobe Spin Art can allow the artist to view the substrate from a variety of angles, as well as in Portrait and Landscape views.
In embodiments, Strobe Spin Art can be designed to safely accommodate UV curing Inks, Dyestuffs, and Paints into the process, and to safely cure deposited materials upon selected substrates using defined spectral light, including UV light.
In embodiments, Strobe Spin Art can be programmed to time the arrival of pigments and/or dyestuffs onto defined areas of the substrate offering more precision control of deposition, and the process for making art.
Strobe Spin Art uses the phenomenon of stroboscopic light to make visible to the artist what happens in Spin Art when pigment impacts the substrate as it rapidly rotates in the platen.
In embodiments, the design is simple enough that assembly is feasible with basic hand tools using commercially available sub-components such as a direct or stepping electric motor, strobe lights of suitable intensity, and U.V. curing lighting of appropriate curing wavelength for the chosen U.V. curable pigments.
Electric motor 4 is enclosed and supported within housing 3. Motor 4 may be, e.g., a direct or stepped motor. The motor is connected so that it can spin the platen that holds the artwork. In embodiments, the motor may have a variable speed, it may have a reversible rotational direction, and it may be controllable to provide a defined amount of rotational arc.
A rotational sensor mechanism 5 is mounted on or near electric motor 4. Sensor 5 is provided to sense the rotational velocity of the motor. In non-limiting examples of a suitable sensor mechanism, a sensor target is connected to the motor shaft. An electro-optical emitter-detector device, an electro-mechanical sensing device, or the like is coupled so that it can measure rotational speeds and that trigger the stroboscopic flash with each rotation.
Also enclosed and supported within housing 3 are one or more platens 6. In operation, substrate materials are mounted on the platen or platens. Although a platen will typically be round, platens may be conformed to other shapes, and they may be provided in various sizes. Sub-container 7 is also enclosed and supported within housing 3. The sub-container is conformed to catch and hold excess pigment material and the like that is expelled during the pigment-application process.
Stroboscopic (“strobe”) lamp 8 is also enclosed and supported within housing 3. In operation, strobe lamp 8 emits discrete flashes of light at an adjustable repetition rate, for the purpose of creating an image of the rotating substrate that appears stationary to the user. In embodiments, it may be desirable for the strobe lamp to be operable only at flash rates well above rates that may induce seizure in humans.
Photocuring lamp 9 is also enclosed and supported within housing 3. Lamp 9 may be configured to emit curing radiation in the ultraviolet spectrum.
In
Some embodiments may include a wireless remote control panel, such as control panel 14, which is shown symbolically within outline 10. In embodiments, control panel 14 may be implemented in any of various hand-held electronic communication devices, such as specially designed devices or personal communication devices that can be adapted through a software application.
Any of various devices, not shown in
With further reference to
Also shown in
Also shown in
It is noteworthy in regard to the various depositors that in embodiments, a programmable depositor could be timed to impact a spinning substrate at a precise moment during its rotation.
Depositor containers may include, by way of non-limiting example, modified squeeze containers, mechanical depositors, and electromechanical depositors that can be timed to deposit pigment materials onto the substrate at precise times in the substrate rotation, as controlled by the control panel.
A detail of
The motor will have to accommodate a series of platens that are designed to hold a specific type of substrates, and needs to handle the torque loads appropriate to the substrates and platen.
The component form of the apparatus places the stroboscopic illumination between the artist, and substrate so that only the substrate is illuminated.
The Control Panel is a series of electronic components that allows the artist, or operator to adjust the rotational speed, of the platen, or its viewing angle, such as Portrait, or Landscape or any 0-90 degree angle, of view.
The flash pulse rate must be extremely short duration, and of high luminosity to capture the spinning substrate, precisely, to render it static in appearance.
Strobe Spin Art allows the artist to deposit pigments in a substrate, a traditional method of creating art, only in this case the artist is depositing non-volatile pigments in a safe manner on the spinning substrate.
An Operator will assist the artist by positioning the substrate in the apparatus, operating the apparatus as the artist deposits pigments on the now spinning substrate, made viewable as still, by precisely timed stroboscopic light upon the substrate, and follows through with the U.V. curing process using prescribed safety measures to deliver a dry, smear-free work of art.
The use of safe U.V. curable pigments allow the artist to expedite the drying process associated with traditional art and spin art, but the curing process must be kept contained due to the powerful frequency of the U.V. illumination.
The Interlocking top is designed to shut down the U.V. light if accidently opened.
The platen, shown with a substrate, would appear in rotation as a blur, if not for the illumination of the stroboscopic light such that the substrate will appear in Landscape, Portrait, or in chosen arc, of 0-90 degrees, clock-wise, or counter clock-wise, in synchronous activity as controlled by the Control Console.
Again safety in the curing process is of paramount concern as U.V. lighting of sufficient frequency for curing pigments may be hazardous to human vision and must be contained within the Apparatus in a light-tight compartment of the Apparatus.
The Stroboscopic Light must provide intense even illumination of the spinning substrate, at recurring accurate intervals per rotation of the motor.
The Stroboscopic Light must be configured to trigger well above the flash rate associated with inducing Photosensitive epilepsy (PSE) when in use.
The Sensor Array should be of a non-contact design, given the rotational speeds of the Motor.
Correct function for the Apparatus includes rotating a selected Substrate at a chosen rotation rate, that Substrate as if still, and in an orientation as chosen by the Artist, through the use of Synchronous Stroboscopic Illumination, allowing the Artist to observe the impact of chosen pigment(s) deposited by the artist upon the seemingly still Substrate. Then after the artistic process has been completed, the pigment that has been deposited upon the Substrate is affixed to the Substrate by means of UV illumination, changing the property of the pigment from liquid, to solid. Strobe Spin Art is an Apparatus for Making Art. It relies on components that can be programmed over a variety of programming needs, and that can communicate to the Control Console, or any hand-held electronic communication device, either individually designed to perform the specific needs of the Apparatus, or existing personal communication devices that can be adapted through an application to offer the Artist control over the artistic process, on the Strobe Spin Art Apparatus.
We see in the graphic representation of the Control Console, either hard wired to the Apparatus, (
Depending upon the type and size of the Strobe Spin Art substrate, and platen, the Strobe Spin Art Apparatus can be scaled to spin something small in size, (approximately 5″ square platen), something medium in size, (approximately 12″ square platen), and something large (a t-shirt, or pillow case, approximately 18″ square platen).
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20210347201 A1 | Nov 2021 | US |