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Mechanical Image Duplicator
From MAKE Magazine
This project first appeared on the pages of MAKE magazine.
Ditch that temperamental color copier for something a little more hands-on.
- Author: Cy Tymony
- Difficulty: Easy
Before Chester Carlson invented photocopying, inventors engineered various mechanical devices to replicate images. With a few everyday items found in the home, you can make a pantograph, an image duplicator that allows you to use one pencil to trace an image while another pencil follows its path in parallel to produce a near-identical copy.
Sections
- Cut out and position cardboard strips.
- Link cardboard strips with paper clips.
- Add pencils and secure to table.
Tools
Relevant parts
- Cardboard, thick, white
Relevant parts (continued)
- Pencils (2)
- Paper
- Paper clips (4)
- Paper clip boxes (2)
- Battery, AA or other small weight

- Tape, transparent
- View:
- Paginated
- Full width

Edit Step 3
— Add pencils and secure to table.
¶
Cut 2 holes in the image duplicator strips large enough for 2 pencils to fit snugly and stand erect, as shown in the picture. Turn the cardboard strips over and slip the hole at the end of the left-hand strip over the paper clip that’s taped to the top of the paper clip box.
Place a second paper clip box under the image duplicator where the 2 large strips meet, to keep it level.
To ensure that the drawing pencil (pink) presses against the paper properly, you can add weight to the cardboard strip by taping a AA battery underneath it.
Place the original image under pencil A (blue), and a blank sheet of paper under pencil B (pink). Trace the original design with pencil A. Pencil B will follow along, drawing the image on the paper.
Experiment with different lengths of strips to make larger and smaller copies of the original design.
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