anne = engineer crafter family = exploring life thru STEAM #MIT #Cal #STEMed #makered #STEAMed

Joined April 2014
5,549 Photos and videos
A great breakdown on how tariffs are impacting companies.
5 Apr 2025
Andrew Chen, co-founder of one of my favorite denim brands, 3sixteen, breaks down how the tariffs affect his company IG 3sixteen
1
69
What an innovative way to approach high school!
11 Jan 2025
This is insane! A new high school outside Dallas dedicated a THIRD of their space to entrepreneurship. The 1st floor is a mall, where 16 local businesses set up shop so students can be mentored, apply for jobs & learn how to run a business. The school also has (see below):
40
LeftBrainCraftBrain retweeted
This is a couple of years old now, but it's still a firm Christmas favourite. One paper plate, no left-overs, one Rudolph. 😮 You can find this on the website and my Youtube too. darrellwakelam.com #christmascraft #rudolph
10
33
108
6,453
LeftBrainCraftBrain retweeted
FAQ: “How do you make a ball out of paper?” “I didn’t know you could make a ball out of paper!” I didn’t anticipate this FAQ regarding a ball made out of scraps during this multi-step foosball design challenge. Background experience varies! Foosball Template: @craftbrain
6
17
811
LeftBrainCraftBrain retweeted
The bomb cyclone is a perfect example of the Fibonacci sequence in nature. The golden ratio, aka the divine proportion, is a mathematical constant that is seen in nearly everything from the human body to paintings and art. #BombCyclone #PacificNorthwest #WxTwitter
40
375
2,097
171,946
LeftBrainCraftBrain retweeted
✨NEW✨ #STEM Tool: A hole puncher It’s a novel way of building the fine motor skills needed for handwriting & cutting with scissors. Hand-eye coordination is tested! ⭕️ Students punched 8 holes, & most chose to continue practicing with the scraps!
1
14
449
Fun with foosball! Thanks @ekuwah for trying this with your class. Such great reflection from your fifth grader. Glad the project could inspire the challenge and introspection!
✏️ “I created a LEGO foosball game. It was hard to build it because you had to get perfect levels on each side… it took so much time testing it. I am better at making things with cardboard.” (5th grader, reflection) Next class… Paper (Cardstock) Foosball (@craftbrain)
1
1
184
Happy Engineer’s Week!!
To celebrate #EngineersWeek, here are 50 awesome engineering projects for kids and #makerspaces from @craftbrain leftbraincraftbrain.com/engi… #makered #edtech #stemeducation
74
LeftBrainCraftBrain retweeted
time-lapse growth of chia seeds on an eggshell watered via capillary action using a tissue. 📹 gardening.999 x.com/Visionaledge/status/17…

91
447
4,259
2,904,908
Science is everywhere 😂
146
Love this!
Lego MOD with Set 31210 abstract kinetic art Kandinsky meets Tinguily Modify with some gears #LEGO #kineticart
1
105
LeftBrainCraftBrain retweeted
A friend sent me the updated scientific method
36
1,228
5,648
504,895
Wow! Things you don’t think about…
Only three people in the nation were qualified to hand-pack the parachutes for the Apollo missions. Their expertise was so vital that they were not allowed to ride in the same car together due to the fear that a single auto accident could cripple the entire space program. The Apollo space capsules heavily relied on parachutes to decelerate their descent back to Earth after lunar missions. The three main parachutes used were enormous, each measuring 83.5 feet across. Each of these parachutes contained an impressive 7,200 square feet of fabric, enough to cover the entire floor space of three typical U.S. homes. These parachutes were constructed from remarkably strong fabric capable of slowing the capsule's descent from 160 miles per hour and gently landing it in the Pacific Ocean. Surprisingly, even though they were robust, a square yard of parachute material weighed just one ounce. The assembly of each parachute was an intricate process, with panels of material being sewn together using approximately 3.5 miles of thread. A staggering two million individual stitches were required for each parachute, and all the seams were meticulously sewn by hand using black Singer sewing machines. The attention to detail was critical because even a single flawed stitch could lead to disaster. Therefore, every inch of every seam was carefully inspected using a light table. After assembly and inspection, the parachutes were folded and packed by hand. During the Apollo missions in the 1960s and early 1970s, only three individuals in the entire country were trained and licensed by the Federal Aviation Administration to fold Apollo parachutes. These skilled experts, Norma Cretal, Buzz Corey, and Jimmy Calunga, handled the parachute-packing duties for all 11 Apollo missions. Their roles were considered so vital that NASA enforced a strict rule that prevented them from traveling together in the same car. The agency couldn't take any chances of all three being injured in a single accident due to the irreplaceable nature of their expertise.
78
Totally have to try this!
Painting water colour cats without a brush 📹Züleyha Aydoğdu
70
LeftBrainCraftBrain retweeted
14 Sep 2023
You are very special. I am very special. I am so glad we had this conversation.
65
1,649
8,299
368,948
LeftBrainCraftBrain retweeted
With every glass of water, the probability of you drinking a molecule that once passed through a dinosaur is ≈100%.
121
179
2,011
384,126
True at our house too. And now my daughter is studying the Roman Empire at school and he’s like I’ve been training for this my whole life.
I saw an IG Reel that said something along the lines of “women have no idea how often the men in their lives think about the Roman Empire.” So I asked my husband: “How often do you think about the Roman Empire?” And without missing a beat he said “Every day.” YALL! Why!?
92
LeftBrainCraftBrain retweeted
“I am, and ever will be, a white-socks, pocket-protector, nerdy engineer, born under the second law of thermodynamics, steeped in steam tables, in love with free-body diagrams, transformed by Laplace and propelled by compressible flow.” - Neil Armstrong
99
342
3,521
782,423
Wow!! The second image when you squint is startling!
28 Aug 2023
A kind of optical illusion used in paintings for centuries Squint or hold your phone away, you will see something else
164