
These 100 things will keep you making until your next trip to any Maker Faire near you no matter where you live.
Here’s a starter list of fun projects you can do to make every day a Maker day. Print out the PDF of “100+ Ways You Can Make It to Next Year’s Maker Faire”, and add your own ideas for fun, family-friendly projects in the comments section below!
- Visit your local makerspace or hackerspace.
- Fly a kite. Attach a camera for aerial photography.
- Build a kit together on Father’s Day.
- Fix something.
- Get your school to start a makerspace.
- Hack your room: add sensors and alarms. Make it your own.
- Build some simple furniture.
- Coat a wall with phosphorescent paint.
- Build a cardboard city in your backyard or living room.
- Paint with light at slumber parties with Glow Doodle.
- Grow your own food.
- Express your freedom on Independence Day by voiding a warranty.
- Hang out at Maker Camp this summer, online and in your neighborhood. makercamp.com — millions of campers, 30 days, 6 epic field trips, dozens of projects.
- Visit the Ingenuity Studio of the Lawrence Hall of Science.
- Explore materials and phenomena in the Exploratorium’s Tinkering Studio.
- Prototype your ideas in The Tech Studio at The Tech Museum of Innovation.
- Check listings at local museums, libraries, community centers, & makerspaces.
- Turn your summer picnic fruit salad into a xylophone with MaKey MaKey.
- Attend World Maker Faire in New York City.
- Add animatronics to your Halloween spooks.
- Bake pi pies for Thanksgiving.
- Animate your holiday lights.
- Launch your New Year’s maker resolutions on compressed air rockets.
- Add red LEDs (and a coin cell) to your valentines.
- Decorate all kinds of round objects, including Easter eggs, with an Eggbot.
- Solder pretty pendants for Mother’s Day.
- Film a video about projects you made. Record your soundtrack!
- Brainstorm the project you’ll exhibit at the next Maker Faire.
- Collect easy-to-open, fixable vintage toys & electronics from garage sales & thrift stores. Mutate two different broken toys together.
- Give gifts you made yourself, tools & materials, or kits as presents.
- Plant some seeds. Train a timelapse camera on your sprouts.
- Give friends tickets or memberships to local science/technology or art museums—and print out their event calendars (and then go to the museum’s workshops together!)
- Customize your bike. Put PoV LEDs on your spokes.
- Post projects & techniques on Make: or to Instructables. Share what you find out in the world with others (and send the most inspiring projects and makers to Make!)
- Print personalized books on nice paper and bind them.
- Leave toy stores empty-handed, with your head full of ideas for things you can make yourself.
- Read this blog for awesome project ideas.
- Learn from videos of people making things (on stage.makezine.com, cable, or public broadcasting).
- Start your own blog to share projects you’re working on.
- Take something small and scale it up by a factor of 10.
- Make a robot (with or without electronics—cardboard + foil are fun too!)
- Connect to local maker clubs or guilds. Or start a maker club!
- Start a portfolio.
- Frame your art (or photos of your projects) and put them up on the wall.
- Transform your neighbor’s jalopy into an art car.
- Convert your school science fair to a school-based mini Maker Faire.
- Subscribe to Make: magazine.
- Attend an Open Make at a local museum.
- Attend an open house at The Crucible.
- Feature a maker theme at your birthday party (Space! Swap-o-Rama-Rama! Robots!)
- Teach someone else how to do something you know how to do.
- Convert something to solar power.
- Go to a Mini Maker Faire, or organize one for your community.
- Save bottle caps, cardboard tubes, boxes, & other useful stuff for your invention box.
- Invite the youngest person in the room work the power tools.
- Take a behind-the-scenes tour at a chocolate factory, bakery, or other manufacturer.
- Remove a wheel from or add a wheel to something.
- Hybridize your closet: hack your clothes.
- Turn your old T-shirts into a bag or a quilt.
- Stitch some EL wire onto your backpack or jacket.
- Mess around with Arduino or Raspberry Pi.
- Start a sketchbook. Write down anything you see that inspires you, and every idea you have whether or not you have time to work on it.
- Make something that’s never been made before.
- Tell us who you are, and let us know what you’ve been making!
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