Make: Magazine, Volume 97 - Tech Craft
Try out bargello embroidery and build your own glowy mini bag, powered by 3D printing and the Pixelblaze LED controller.
SHOP NOW
Complete Magazine eCollection
Discover two decades of maker creativity across more than 90 issues, from the very first issue to nearly the latest — all in one place.
SHOP NOW
DIY Fish Wood Carving Kit
Learn to whittle and paint your own fish carving with beginner-friendly video tutorials and all the materials you need to start immediately.
SHOP NOW
DIY Theremin Electronic Kit
Build and play an electronic musical instrument that responds to your movements through electric fields, without touch.
SHOP NOW
Make: Magazine, Volume 97 - Tech Craft
Try out bargello embroidery and build your own glowy mini bag, powered by 3D printing and the Pixelblaze LED controller.
SHOP NOW
Complete Magazine eCollection
Discover two decades of maker creativity across more than 90 issues, from the very first issue to nearly the latest — all in one place.
SHOP NOW
DIY Fish Wood Carving Kit
Learn to whittle and paint your own fish carving with beginner-friendly video tutorials and all the materials you need to start immediately.
SHOP NOW
DIY Theremin Electronic Kit
Build and play an electronic musical instrument that responds to your movements through electric fields, without touch.
SHOP NOWSuggested Add-ons
This accessible guide teaches how to design, build, and control robotic arms. Using simple, affordable parts, readers will learn how to build a robotic arm, control it with an Arduino, and add servos to add degrees of motion for increasingly complex movements. Readers will also learn inverse kinematics, a mathematical process that enables robots to move, lift, and draw with more precision than humans.
This is not a book for hardcore engineers, but a beginners guide for makers, teachers, and students with no previous experience required.
About the Author
Matt Eaton is the makerspace and fabrication lab manager at High Point University's Webb School of Engineering in North Carolina. He was previously the founder of Anyone Can Build Robots, a philanthropic robotics company aimed at producing high-quality, affordable robotics kits. Matt has also served as a high school robotics teacher, a coach for robotics teams, and a developer of robotics and computer-science curriculum for schools. He lives in Greensboro, North Carolina.
