June 6, 2020, Maker Faire Long Island

Formally known as the Eastern Long Island Mini Maker Faire, our faire is now Maker Faire Long Island! We have a new name, new logo and growing community of Makers come from across the United States

We now need you! Our Call for Makers & Call for Volunteers is open and this will be a big year.

Previous Makers: If you are one of our Makers from 2019 and would like your previous year’s entry to be transferred, email us at makerplanner@longislandexplorium.org with the request.

As always, if you know of any Makers that would be a great addition to our Faire, please do not hesitate to pass along their contact information.

If you are interested in helping in any way please email me at makerplanner@longislandexplorium.org. Without this wonderful community and incredible people, none of this would be possible. Thank you all for making the Faire the showcase of innovation and creativity in the community it is today.

Media Contact:
Lisa Collet Rodriguez, M.S.
Maker Faire Long Island Co-Producer
Long Island Explorium
101 East Broadway, PO Box 465
Port Jefferson, NY 11777

Our “Call for Makers” is open!

Volunteer this year and have fun while making this event the best ever!

 

A Look Forward & a Look Back

Artists, craftsmen, engineers, scientists and people who just like making stuff will come together for the Eastern Long Island Mini Maker Faire on June 8 in Port Jeff.

The fair is hosted by the Long Island Explorium.

The Eastern Long Island Mini Maker Faire is part of an international collective that highlights local maker culture — people who like to tinker and build anything from boats to costumes to furniture.

It’s like a science fair, but with a lot more flash and fun.

scroll down for 2018 photos

“There’s something for everybody,” said Sally Wellinger, who’s co-producing this year’s event. “Whatever your interest is, there will be makers who will spark your interest.”

Wellinger started volunteering for the event but quickly rose in the ranks. Last year she helped organize the talent for the fair. This year she’s one of the people charged with its success.

The Mini Maker Faire is a maker project in and of itself, which requires pulling together an assortment of Long Island’s geeks, techies, scientists, do-it-yourselfers and cosplayers into a cohesive whole.

Vendors will sell goods while demonstrating their crafts, and others will put on exhibitions and live shows. Although vendors will be selling their wares, this is not your typical craft fair.

The organizers call it “the Greatest Show (& Tell) on Earth.”

The idea is not only to showcase talented local makers but to inspire the maker inside us all.

It’s also about solving problems.

“At the heart of the Maker Movement is the understanding that making is uniquely human,” the official Maker website says. The fairs were started when Make: Magazine launched as a DIY bible for tech projects and began hosting the events.

The first one was held in 2006 near San Francisco.

“It started out with people who were into tech and computers,” explained Wellinger, a self-described geek for everything maker. “Then tech got cool. Well, it was always cool.”

The areas around and between the Long Island Explorium on East Broadway and the Villager Center in Harborfront Park will be the grounds for the event.

Wellinger says things will happen inside and out, rain or shine. Tickets can be purchased through the organization’s website or at the door.

“It’s about networking and connecting,” said Wellinger “It’s exciting to be around and meet so many cool people. You have scientists talking to engineers talking to artists.”

She described the type of person who is a maker as someone doing something interesting they want to share with others.

“People who have a passion.”

Last year, the youngest maker was 7 and the oldest was 79.

It’s not lost on the organizers that Port Jefferson is probably an early inspiration for DIY makers because of its history steeped ship making.

“We try to keep it authentic to our community and the harbor with Port Jefferson being a port community and has a history of shipbuilding,” Wellinger said.

The fair will indeed incorporate nautical themes.

Marine biologists will be on hand, including Oceanswide and its underwater ROV, a remote-controlled rover just like the ones seen exploring the Titanic on film. Boatbuilders out of the Bayles Boat Shop will also be demonstrating their skills.

The focus is to balance as many of the STEAM vocations in this event as possible. STEAM is an educational movement that stands for science, technology, engineering, arts and math.

“We pull all of those great minds together,” she said. “That’s what makes it different. We have such a wide spectrum of makers.”

Local business will be there too.

“So people on Long Island can see what’s going on in our own backyard.”

A list of interactive performances that day include Ryu Shu Taiko Drums, the Long Island Vegetable Orchestra, and “That Physics Show” from NYC. And the Long Island Ghostbusters are going to make an appearance.

A bus transformed into a tiny home on wheels called a skoolie will be there as well.

There will even be a contortionist performing an Avengers: Endgame act.

“There’s something for everybody,” said Wellinger.

Visit the website to learn more and to buy tickets.

By Kyle Barr

Creativity, innovation, experimentation and a whole lot of fun are all on the menu as the Village of Port Jefferson gears up for the third annual Eastern Long Island Mini Maker Faire to be held on June 9 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Hosted by the nonprofit Long Island Explorium (formerly the Maritime Explorium) and the Greater Port Jefferson-Northern Brookhaven Arts Council, the event will take place at the Explorium, all three floors of the Port Jefferson Village Center and spill out onto the adjacent Jeanne Garant Harborfront Park as makers from all over Long Island and beyond will come bringing robots, music, woodworking, metal sculptures and practically anything handmade to celebrate the exciting worlds of science, technology, engineering, music, art and math.

Last year the event drew more than 2,000 visitors who were able to experience everything from 3-D printing to flame belching metal sculptures.

Ray Rumore with his robot ‘Volt’ at last year’s Mini Maker Faire. Photo from Chris Rumore

Angeline Judex, executive director of the Explorium in Port Jefferson, said she expects close to 60 “Makers” will be there for this year’s event. “At this event, people are able to explore new concepts and technologies, take [this knowledge] home with them and then dive into their own exploration and engagement to create their own maker experience,” Judex said in an email. “It transforms theory into reality. It excites, inspires and motivates the next generation to embrace STEM as a resource for innovative problem solving.”

New this year will be the Long Island Vegetable Orchestra featuring students from the Waldorf School in Garden City using carrots, squash and gourds as musical instruments and a visit from the Suffolk County Chapter of the Society for Creative Anachronism, which will demonstrate how trades such as blacksmithing, inks and paints and naval shipbuilding technology have evolved over time.

Returning this year will be costume maker Tom DePetrillo from Rhode Island-based Extreme Costumes who dazzled participants in last year’s Makers Faire with his burly Transformers Bumblebee costume. This year he will be bringing a to-scale HulkBuster Iron Man suit seen in the movies “Avengers: Age of Ultron” and “Avengers: Infinity War.”

“People really enjoy the giant costumes,” said DePetrillo.

The Hulkbuster costume took 10 months and approximately 1,600 man hours to complete. DePetrillo tours all over the world with his giant designs as a full-time job. It enables him to keep making and creating. “It allows me to have an outlet for my creative energy,” he said. “I do this because I love doing it.”

Father and son team Chris and Ray Rumore have been attending the Mini Maker Faire every year since its inception. Ray Rumore got involved with 3-D printing, crafting and robotics, and created a robot named “Volt,” a companion robot who can follow him around and live stream events with his on-board camera.

“Ray enjoys three main things about Maker Faires — they allow him the opportunity to encourage others to join the fun and become a Maker, the opportunity to meet other Makers and learning about their creations and the food,” the elder Rumore said in an email.

The event is sponsored in part by Stony Brook University, BASF Chemical Company, Capital One, Riverhead Building Supplies and Suffolk County Community College.

The Eastern Long Island Mini Maker Faire will be held on June 9 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., rain or shine, at the Maritime Explorium, 101 East Broadway, Port Jefferson. Tickets, which are $10 per person, are available online at www.easternlongislandmakerfaire.com and at the door. Parking will be available around the Village of Port Jefferson, Off Street Parking, Brookhaven Town Lot as well as Spring Street. The Port Jeff Jitney will be running during the day. For further information, please call 631-331-3277.

Check out our Newsday article published in April 2018!

LIFESTYLE / FAMILY / KIDSDAY
Photo Credit: Kidsday illustration / Ashton Hopkins

Eastern Long Island Mini Maker Faire: A fun place to learn

by Carter Altholtz

Kidsday Reporter
April 3, 2018 1:21 PM

The annual Eastern Long Island Mini Maker Faire will be held June 9 in Port Jefferson, hosted by The
Maritime Explorium.

The Mini Maker Faire is a venue where friendly people show interesting displays, games and other fun
kinds of things for kids of all ages. In the Village Center, right next to the beach, they have 3-D printers, and
sometimes they let you keep a 3-D printed object. You will finda lot of makers and vendors in the Village
Center on its three floors. The bottom floor often has DIY projects made with various things that are in
your house. On the middle floor, there are usually many scientists from all over the country. The top floor
has 3-D printers, virtual reality headsets and a lot of string-based creations like hand knitting (which I will
be presenting again this year) and math strategy using crochet patterns.

The robotic teams from Stony Brook University and many local high schools including Smithtown and
Miller Place use Legos, Erector sets and Meccano-type sets to build functioning robots that can do things
such as play catch and soccer and move things to build a wall. The classes and demonstrations teach you
about science, robotics and more. The Navy has water-related robotics in an outdoor pool.

You may see jewelry and custom lacrosse sticks being made, or ice cream made using liquid nitrogen.
Sometimes there are drones used for video surveillance and delivering packages. And don’t forget about
the awesome food trucks.

Eastern Long Island Mini Maker Faire: A fun place to learn

It is a really fun time for everyone. I hope you get the chance to come out and enjoy the 2018 Mini Maker
Faire and stop by to see my booth all about hand knitting.

Brian Harvey’s sixth-grade class, Minnesauke Elementary School, East Setauket

« Previous Page