by: Carolyn Sun
Nine-year-old Matthew is the owner of a
brightly-colored prosthetic Robohand that was created several months ago in the MakerSpace of
the Johnson County Library in Overland Park, KS. Matthew, who is adopted, was born
with partial fingers on his right hand due to a birth condition called limb
difference.
He’d always been a self-confident kid, according to his mother, Jennifer,
whose father had been born with the same condition. But, after they moved to
Miami County, KS, two years ago, Matthew endured the spotlight of being the new
kid as well as relentless questions about his hand from classmates.
“Social stigma was starting to creep in on him,” she says.
However, Matthew didn’t want a commercial prosthetic hand, which can cost up
to $18,000. Even with insurance, Jennifer, a single mother of three children,
could not afford it.
The genesis of Matthew’s prosthetic hand came from one of Matthew’s teachers
who’d sent Jennifer a link to Robohand,
a cost-effective model of a prosthetic hand co-created by South African Richard
Van As, who’d lost his own fingers in a workshop accident, and theatrical
artist, Ivan Owen back in November 2012. A 3-D printer version was designed in
January 2013 with how-to instructions available online.
When Matthew first saw photos of the Robohand, “He was immediately excited,
says his mom. “I think it was the fact it was colored and looked like something
that could be made from LEGOs.”
The Johnson County’s Central Resource Library boasts a 3-D MakerBot
printer in its MakerSpace located right next to the library’s information
services desk. The MakerSpace opened last March, and in addition to the
MakerBot, contains Apple desktops and audio and digital recording equipment. On
the library’s MakerSpace website, the suggested projects
for MakerSpace are diverse and DIY, from websites and musical recordings to
shower curtain rings and chess pieces.
When Matthew’s mom went to work studying the prosthetic hand design, she soon
realized it was beyond her skills. She reached out to 16-year-old Mason Wilde, a
family friend’s son who’d helped her eldest son with computer programs in the
past and had, last year, built a computer from scratch.
Mason, a student at Louisburg (KS) High School, had coincidentally been
sitting out football season due to a concussion and had been encouraged by his
doctor to “seek enrichment—and the opportunity to enrich others—outside of
football” according to his mother, Kelly Wilde.
“I’ve always been fascinated by machines and engineering feats,” he says, “so
when I was given the opportunity to work with a 3-D printer and build a hand,
all while helping a family friend, I jumped on it.”
All in all, the Robohand project took Mason five hours of labor over a span
of three weeks.
Meredith Nelson,a reference librarian atJohnson County’s Central Resource
LIbrary, has been teaching introductory MakerBot classes (on alternating Mondays
and Wednesdays) since the MakerSpace opened last March. She teaches the basics
of how the MakerBot works, how to download and slice a file, and how to 3-D
print.
Nelson, a self-proclaimed “Maker-Librarian,” had no prior experience with 3-D
printing before the MakerBot’s arrival. She mastered it through
trial-and-error.
“I took [the printer] apart about 75,961 times,” she says, “The first time it
jams, you freak out and don’t know how or where to open everything. After that,
you just roll your eyes and do it.”
Nelson says MakerSpace and its advanced equipment and skills software has
attracted new patrons to the library who’d previously thought they had little
use for it.
“Many people, who only saw the library as a place for books or quiet study,
have realized we can be more.”
At present, Matthew is able to pick up a pencil and is working on writing
legibly. He refers to his hand as “the future.”
“The main thing that Matthew can do with the hand is be a center of attention
for a cool thing,” says his mom, “not a what-happened-to-your hand thing.”
Mason, who plans on pursuing mechanical engineering career in the future,
intends to make more Robohands for Matthew as he grows.
from: Digital Shift
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