For comics fans and budding artists and writers, it doesn’t get better than this.  It’s tons of fun to read and collect comic books, but the real joy is in making your own, and what better way to learn how than from the masters.  Nick Dragotta is a Marvel Comics artist working on such titles as Web of Spider-Man and Captain America: Forever Allies; Nick is also the pen behind HowToons, which uses comics to teach kids how to build things, combining instructions with storytelling.  Michael Chabon is the Pulitzer-prize winning author of The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay (among many other amazing books), and the father of three Park Day Schoolers plus one lovely high schooler.  Nick and Michael are teaming up on a workshop at the Mini Maker Faire, to make mini comic makers out of all our children.
Nick Dragotta's Spider Man

Some of Nick's Work

This is just the first of many reasons you should put the East Bay Mini Maker Faire on your calendar for October 24th.  You and your kids will get to see Michael develop a story and Nick illustrate it in real time, and then your kids will get to do the same with help from both these inspiring creators.  You’ll develop a character and learn how to tell that story using the tools of the graphic medium.  Since it’s the week before Halloween, perhaps you can take your creative work over to our Halloween costume booth afterwards, and become your character!
“…It has been the risk-takers, the doers, the makers of things, some celebrated, but more often men and women obscure in their labor, who have carried us up the long, rugged path toward prosperity and freedom.”
–President Obama in his inauguration speech
Perhaps we are getting a little grand for a school-sponsored community event, but when Obama uttered these words last January, I immediately thought of the Maker Faire and all the creative, experimental, inspiring folks who participate.  Since our goal is to celebrate that spirit and nurture that culture within our community, I felt these were fitting words with which to announce our very own Call for Makers, which opens today.

What is a Call for Makers?  Basically it’s an invitation to come show your stuff at the event.  We ask you to fill out a form telling us about what you’d like to show at the Faire, so we know who you are and we can keep track all of you, and we choose as many as we can fit to exhibit on October 24th.

But who is a Maker and what kinds of exhibits are appropriate?  Pretty much whatever you make or do that you’re passionate about, as long as it’s something you can easily share with others.  Maybe you and your child have made a box car, and would like to show it off.  Maybe you make hats and mittens out of old sweaters you’ve felted.  Maybe you’re an artist and the traditional gallery venue doesn’t really fit the scale or the mood of your work.  Maybe you teach Indian dance and you could teach it to a crowd!  Or maybe you have a half-finished project in the garage that is just itching for a deadline…  This is your great excuse to get out the tools or the knitting needles or whatever it is you’ve been neglecting!

Your Mini Maker Faire submission can be a display of something you’ve done, an activity you offer to do with kids and adults.  But we are also looking for performers, teachers, food vendors and arts, crafts and other wares vendors, as long as they fit the theme.  If your booth will sell something (handmade goods, DIY kits, etc) we charge at $100 tax deductible donation to Park Day School.  If you’re just sharing what you’ve made with the world, there’s no cost to exhibit.  If you’re selling handmade goods, feel free to use the shorter form, the Call for Crafters, which is linked here.  We ask for a bit less detail here.

The call for Makers will be open until August 31, but don’t wait to submit your exhibit.   And don’t wait to tell your friends who have cool crazy projects about the first annual East Bay Mini Maker Faire!

It’s all relative, I suppose.  We came back from a wonderful Maker Faire in San Mateo last weekend, and of course the event is huge.  When we decided to put on a Mini Maker Faire at our kids’ school next year, it seemed so manageable.  But really you could produce an event 1/100th the size of the Maker Faire and it would still be a lot of work.  It could also be a lot of fun.  We’re hoping for equal proportions.


Who are we and why are we doing this?  We are parents of children who attend Park Day School in Oakland, CA.  Park is an amazing school, with a wise and skilled staff and faculty, a truly gorgeous campus, and a warm and energetic community.  I hope I speak for many of the parents when I say that we chose this school for our kids because it encourages their curiosity and helps them learn for themselves.  Park gives them the space to explore what’s interesting to them.


As parents, I guess that’s what we’re doing with this Mini Maker Faire.  We have both an interest and a requirement to volunteer for the school every year, and many of us choose to help with fundraising efforts.  Park has for 24 years produced one of highlight events of the year for garden enthusiasts, the Secret Gardens of the East Bay Tour, so there is a history of creative, community-focused fundraising events.


We proposed a Mini Maker Faire as a fundraiser so we could combine two of our greatest passions: Maker culture and our kids’ educations.  So much of the culture around us tells us – and our children – that our first job is to be consumers.  The more we can expose our kids to a culture of do-it-yourself, a culture of building, hacking, remixing, crafting, experimenting, and designing, the culture we see in Make and Craft magazines, the more they’ll see the opportunities to shape the world around them.  We all consume, but we want to teach our kids to not only consume less, but also to create.  Let’s encourage a generation of mini makers.


Our goals with the Mini Maker Faire are summed up by the requisite list of three C words: culture, community, and curriculum.  There’s a fourth, cash, but it’s a longer term goal; we hope this evolves into a fundraising stream for the school, but our wise leaders in the administration at Park understand that the event must serve a community before it can raise funds, so we’re focused on the first three for now.  The means our main work this summer is to reach out to the larger community and inspire the teachers at Park to make the Mini Maker Faire a big part of their curriculum next fall.  The culture part will hopefully come along for the ride.


In the spirit of maker culture, we are making this up as we go along.  We’re a handful of parents with a supportive school administration, loosely organized, with an adventurous spirit and more enthusiasm than resources.  If you’re willing to help –whether its organizing, exhibiting, or just spreading the word, leave a comment here and we’ll contact you.

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