All Industrial Design programs have shops filled with stationary, power and hand tools. But students are still required to carry some basics as we learn the craft of putting things together.
The quintessential tool for adhering anything to anything, and the bond was always guaranteed to last until about five minutes before you were scheduled to present your work.
For making wireframes, wireframes, and more wireframes. And I'm pretty sure the solder we used in the early '90s still had lead in it, which explains me and my classmates' mental states.
Come to think of it, given the fact that we pulled a lot of all-nighters and frequently kept the hot tip of both this and the glue gun right next to a stack of newsprint drawings, I'm kind of amazed that none of us burned the studio down.
For when you needed to bend small radii for your wireframes and your fingers wouldn't do. This may be the only tool I've got left over from my original ID school toolbox that I still use around the house on a regular basis.
To rough things out in blue foam, you needed to use three tools in order:
1. The stationary hotwire cutter in the shop for 2D roughing
2. One of the rasps out of the tool closet for 3D roughing
3. A Dremel to do the fine detail work
This thing would get pretty hot if you used it for too long, but the good news is that at 19 years old carpal tunnel syndrome is still a long ways off.
Possibly the tool I used the most throughout the entire degree program. Used to cut everything from the various types of paper to acetate to scoring balsa wood, and in a pinch you could get acceptable curves in foamcore if you used it like a slow-motion reciprocating saw.
Some students used these to cut the endless matte boards for presentations. At Pratt we used these to settle scores in the cafeteria.
Not everyone had one of these, but I invested in one under the illusion that if I cut my matte board windows at a 45-degree bevel, it would make my presentation drawings look like they didn't suck. And one real benefit of this tool was that with a sharp blade it allowed you to cut through matte boards in a single pass, unlike the multiple passes you'd have to take with a score-settling knife.
Mine didn't look like the one in these photos, by the way; I couldn't find an image for the all-silver one I had as it's no longer made, probably because it sucked.
At some point you cut foamcore with an all-metal ruler or metal T-square flipped over. And the ruler would slip midway through the cut, leaving you with a curved line. Then you'd try to use A-clamps on one end, but the ruler would bow in the middle. So finally you wised up and spent the extra few bucks on a ruler that had some no-slip texture on the back.
These were cheaper to buy in bulk than utility knife blades, and made a way better cut through 1/4" foamcore. The trade-off was that they were ergonomically poor, especially if you had to do dozens or hundreds of cuts.
Not really a tool, but with all of the blades we went through—X-Acto, utility, razors—you couldn't just toss those things into the garbage when you were done with them or the custodian would have cuts all over his body. So you had to have something on your desk to toss the spent sharps into. If a plastic bottle, the cap was the lid; if a soda can, you taped over the opening, then slit it with the first blade you dropped into it, and the little slit was usually enough to keep the blades from spilling out if you knocked it over.
_______________________________________________________________________
These weren't the sole extent of what we all carried, of course, but this is pretty close to the bare minimum that you'd find in everyone's kit.
Ex-ID students of a certain age: What'd I miss?
Current ID students: Do they make you guys cut matte boards for presentations, or is it all digital now?
Up Next: The actual objects we used in order to carry all of this crap around.
Read the rest of the What Industrial Design Students Had to Carry series here:
Create a Core77 Account
Already have an account? Sign In
By creating a Core77 account you confirm that you accept the Terms of Use
Please enter your email and we will send an email to reset your password.
Comments
Comment on this
I've cut maaaaybe 6 mat boards in the last 10 years, but I'll never give this thing up.
Workable Fixatif or some Aquanet. Respirator for those bondo moments.
Its all digital now. Some quick hand sketches scanned into Photoshop and few splines later we have photo realistic renders, and for models I can make a quick mock up in Solidworks and have it the CNC or 3D printer within hours.
Did you already mention spray mount? 3M 77? Great stuff. Mechanical pencils and different hardness pencils: H, HH, HB, etc. Tape, so much masking tape. You quickly realize the crappy cheap masking tape is not really repositionable, and it tears easily. Airbrush and liquid watercolors. What a royal mess. Light tables; do they have those anymore? Great as a surface for cutting, if you couldn't afford a proper cutting surface. UHU glue, which is like the glue used in scale models. So much stuff!!!! It filled the trunk of my 92' VW Golf!
Comment on this
I'm trying to find this Dexter model! Do you know what it's called?