Welcome, Martha fans!

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[Photo: Anders Krusberg/The Martha Stewart Show]


If you're coming to our site after having seen MAKE's Editor-in-Chief Mark Frauenfelder on The Martha Stewart Show, welcome! We thought we'd take this opportunity to introduce Martha's viewers (and others who might be new to MAKE) to what we do and why. We've got a lot of different things going on and are tremendously excited by the work we do and the global community of do-it-yourself (DIY) enthusiasts we collaborate with on our many projects.

[Note: We've put together a page of (free) PDFs for all of the projects Mark demonstrated on the show. You can find that here.]

Maker Media is the name of our company, we're a division of O'Reilly Media, the highly regarded technology publisher. Under the Maker Media umbrella, we produce the quarterly MAKE magazine, run two busy websites, Make: Online and CRAFT, produce annual DIY festivals, called Maker Faire, run a store, called Maker Shed, and work with Twin Cities Public Television who produce the popular Make: television program on PBS.


MAKE Magazine > >
MAKE_V18_275.jpgMAKE magazine is how we got started in all of this. It's a quarterly technology projects magazine and a sort of house organ for the maker/DIY movement. Projects in the magazine range from old-school balsa wood and tissue-paper airplanes to what to do with old high-tech gadgets to building autonomous robots from techno-junk. Our current issue, Volume 18, is entitled "ReMake America," and explores sustainability and how to prosper in these challenging times using DIY technology and good ol' human ingenuity. We produce both a print and a digital edition of our magazine. You can subscribe here and find back issues here.

 

Make: Online > >
Make: Online is the award-winning website that you're reading right now. It is one of the most popular online watering holes for makers, crafters, inventors, tinkers, and amateur technologists and scientists of all stripes who come here for breaking DIY stories, original content on building, repairing, and making things, and for how-to project articles. We also have several popular video series that run every week on the site: Weekend Projects, MAKE Presents, and How-To Tuesday, that present cool projects, kit builds, and explain (in plain English) how various technologies work. Here's a recent Weekend Project:

 

CRAFT > >
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CRAFT is Make: Online's sister site. This is sewing, knitting, cooking, gardening, and decorating for a tech-savvy 21st century. Take a look each day for a new how-to project, from making jewelry out of plastic bottles to LED embroidery. Bookmark the blog and find the best of what's happening in the craft world as well as bi-weekly videos and downloadable patterns. CRAFT Summer Camp kicks off today with fun kids craft projects all summer long!

 

Maker Faire > >
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Maker Faire is our annual DIY festival, makers meet-up, show and tell, and celebration of creativity, invention, self-directed learning, and the incomparable joys of making. We've held Faires in the SF/Bay Area for the last four years and in Austin, TX for the past two. A Maker Faire UK took place in Newcastle, UK this spring, the first event over seas. Last year's Bay Area Faire attracted some 65,000 people. Apparently, there are more people interested in art cars, a life-size mousetrap game, human-powered carnival rides, rocketry and robots, Tesla coils, and swap-o-ramas than you might think. This year's Bay Area Faire, May 30 & 31, is inspired by the president's call to "the risk-takers, the doers, the makers of things" in his Inaugural address, and his challenge to begin the "remaking of America."

 

Maker Shed > >
The Maker Shed is easy to describe. Think of the coolest technology bookstore, museum gift shop, arts & craft shop, and electronics store you can dream up -- now roll them all into one. That's the idea behind the Maker Shed. It's an irresistible collection of books, kits, robots, microcontrollers, science sets, electronics, craft tools and supplies, all curated by us, the people behind MAKE and CRAFT. It's all of the wondrous stuff we'd want to find in such a store. Maker Shed is a year-round online store and we also set up full-size retail operations at each of our Maker Faires.


To introduce you to MAKE and to the Maker Shed, we've put together a special "Welcome to MAKE" bundle. It includes a one-year subscription to MAKE (four issues), a copy of The Best of MAKE, a 380-page collection of our favorite projects from the first ten issues, and a copy of The Maker's Notebook, a unique project notebook, with plenty of high-quality graph paper for sketching out your projects, and a reference section in the back of weights, measures, facts, figures, and other indispensable info geared towards makers and crafters. The bundle saves you $41 off buying the items individually.

 

Make: television > >
Make: television is the DIY series for a new generation! It celebrates all manner of "maker" - the inventors, artists, geeks, crafters, basement scientists, and just plain folks who mix new and old technology to create newfangled contraptions. The series encourages everyone to invent, re-invent, recycle, upcycle, and act up. Each half-hour episode inspires millions to think, create, and make cool, unusual, and useful objects. Some of the projects on the show have included a burrito blaster(!), a VCR-driven cat feeder, a cigar box guitar, a simple digital TV Antenna, a wind turbine, and a how to on building solar-powered robots from junk and basic electronics. Make: television began showing nationwide on Public Television stations and online at makezine.tv in January 2009. All of the episodes are now available online. Here's a sample from a Maker Profile segment, from episode 110, of Syuzi Pakhchyan, author of Fashioning Technology.


Maker Profile - Wearable Technology on Make: television from make magazine on Vimeo.

 

We hope you enjoy our offerings and will join us in our quest to put the joy of making things back into our hectic modern lives. The full title of our magazine is "Make: technology on your time." We're all about taking back control of our technology rather than having it overwhelm us. We do everything we can to learn about the technology in our lives, to improve upon it, make it our own, and to share what we've learned with the growing community of fellow makers. We hope you'll join us on this journey. And if you want to get a truly thrilling and eye-opening experience of the length and breadth of the maker movement, come to this month's Maker Faire (May 30, 31). We can assure you it's like nothing you've ever experienced and that you will come away truly inspired.


Here's a list of the projects Mark demonstrated on the show and links to free PDFs of all the how-to articles for them found in MAKE magazine.

If you have questions about Maker Media, or any of our projects, please feel free to ask in the comments feature below.


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Comments

Oldest comments listed first.

Posted by: Get some morals on May 18, 2009 at 3:38 PM

Wouldn't watch anything that included this felon

Sorry Make. You're really letting me down lately. I won't watch, and wouldn't watch anything that includes Martha Slap on the Wrist Stewart. She's a scumbag that bought her way out of real trouble, while screwing over her share holders.
Not interested in the slightest. Next!


Posted by: Amy on May 18, 2009 at 4:18 PM

Actually, that's not true. Interesting, eh?

You should do a bit of research before you make such a slanderous comment about someone. Martha was found not guilty! What she served time for, was lying to a federal employee...and she wasn't even under oath, and she told the truth from her side of the issue, not knowing the information about the guy that owned the research on the medication that was at the center of the probe.


Posted by: John Park on May 18, 2009 at 4:51 PM

I'm so excited to see MAKE put in front of a totally new and huge audience! Also: I'd totally buy a Martha Stewart branded Arduino in Anjou Pear green.


Posted by: Diana on May 18, 2009 at 6:11 PM

Guitar

I was hoping to find the plans for the electric guitar (made from a table leg, I believe) that you had on Martha today. The guitar and plans that you have on the link are not the same one. Do you have those available, or am I going to have to figure that one out on my own?


Posted by: Mark Frauenfelder on May 19, 2009 at 12:07 PM

3-string guitar

Thanks for your comment, Diana. I am planning on writing a how-to for my 3-string guitar in a future issue of Make.

Best -- Mark


Posted by: Anonymous on May 19, 2009 at 6:48 AM

If we really want to show them, shouldn't there be a flame war about how make is no longer about making but about extremist political browbeating?


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