With an overwhelming majority of indoor exhibits, the Miami Mini Maker Faire will be in full force today – rain or shine (thankfully, the forecast is looking much better!). Enjoy a day with family, friends, and fellow maker enthusiasts for an event that promises to amaze, dazzle, and inspire!
More than 60 exhibitors will be on-site – from skilled craftsmen demonstrating their trade to cutting-edge techies showing off some of the latest advances including 3D printing, robotics, and the Oculus Rift (virtual reality).
With workshops for all ages, food trucks, and live music, the Miami Mini Maker Faire has got something for everyone!
See you all today!
PARKING: The entrance to the Miami Mini Maker Faire is through the front entrance of the LAB Miami, located at 400 NW 26th Street, Miami, FL 33127. There is plenty of metered and free parking throughout the Wynwood area, including the blocks surrounding each venue. There is also a free parking lot available across the street from the NW 25th street entrance to the LAB Miami. Make sure not to park in any area with yellow stripe along the sidewalk as these are “no parking” zones and your car may be towed.
OFFICIAL PROGRAM: Our inaugural year’s program is jam-packed with fun interactive exhibits and presentations. DOWNLOAD the printed Official Program guide HERE: MMMF Program 2013.
We’re can’t wait to see you all tomorrow!
We will have complimentary screenings of two must-see, maker themed documentaries at O Cinema Wynwood as part of Miami Mini Maker Faire this Saturday!
First up, Bots High, at 11:00am and 2:30pm. Bots High follows three teams of high school robotics geeks who build and battle their way to a national robotics competition in Miami. Funny, smart, and inspiring, these kids navigate high school, adolescence, and first love while reducing enemy bots to shards of scrap metal.
The second complimentary documentary screening at this Saturday’s Faire is Spark: A Burning Man Story. Showtimes are 12:30pm and 4:00pm. Spark: A Burning Man Story brings audiences behind-the-scenes of the legendary celebration, shining a light on the triumphs and challenges of the artists fighting harsh realities to keep their ideals of unbridled freedom and community alive.
Both are fantastic and you won’t want to miss them!
Showtimes:
Bots High – 11:00am and 2:30pm
SPARK: A Burning Man Story – 12:30pm and 4:00pm
O Cinema is located at 90 NW 29th Street, Miami, FL. Seating is limited and will be available on a first-come-first-serve basis. We will have a double-decker bus available for complimentary rides from The LAB Miami to O Cinema and back throughout the length of the Faire.
Some folks have asked us “so what sort of things can I expect to see at the Miami Mini Maker Faire?”
Words often fail to do justice to the wonderful projects you’ll find at a Maker Faire, but pictures can help give a better idea. Check out our Facebook photo albums from our recent trips to World Maker Faire in NYC (here) and Orlando Mini Maker Faire (here) for a glimpse at what you can expect to see on November 16th!
We’ve been crazy busy trying to get everyone on point for the 16th, but came up for air just long enough last night to notice we have been featured in several media channels over the past few days! Here’s a quick take on the action:
Nancy Dahlberg is a business and tech writer over at the Miami Herald and writes a blog which covers the South Florida tech scene called “The Starting Gate“. She’s been busy getting into the maker community which has been gaining incredible momentum here in South Florida. Last Thursday, she published this beautiful piece of coverage about our community and what we’ve been brewing.
[…] to showcase all the activity, a Miami Mini Maker Faire, a one-day extravaganza for all things handmade, is coming to three locations in Wynwood next month. There, about 60 makers will exhibit their creations — including a school bus converted into a micro-theater, a high-tech, high-def pinball machine and, possibly, [Brian] Weiner’s 16-foot biplane made from bamboo. There also will be presentations, workshops and activities for all ages at the Mini Maker Faire, which is expected to draw about 1,000. “It’s a great place to bring your kids,” said organizer Rick Herrero.
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/10/23/v-fullstory/3707942/maker-movement-grows-in-south.html
The rest of the article describes new makerspaces which are popping up all over South Florida and includes a gallery of photos from various events in the community. This, alone, was great! Little did we know that the story would be appearing in print on the FRONT PAGE of the Miami Herald.
We shared the HELL out of that story and got some incredible attention! The next day, we were covered in the South Florida Business Journal.
DIY experts and fanatics are getting together in Wynwood Nov. 16 to share their work and their enthusiasm for things like robotics and 3D printing.
Read more here: http://www.bizjournals.com/southflorida/blog/morning-edition/2013/10/robotics-3d-printing-and-diy-creation.html
Oscar Pedro Musibay reporting.
And the coup de grâce was discovering that we had been featured on the front page of the Make Blog.
“The Miami Mini Maker Faire is one part of a plan to build a sense of community among these local makers and connect them with a larger global movement.” said Matt Haggman, Knight Foundation program director in Miami.
Read more here: http://makezine.com/2013/10/25/feel-the-heat-maker-faire-coming-to-miami/
Thank you for sharing, Stett Holbrook
As a community organizer and advocate of the maker movement, it is incredibly gratifying to be able to produce an event like the Miami Mini Maker Faire which has the ability to attract so many creatives across such a diverse set of disciplines; not to mention the reception this event has received from the community. We greatly look forward to seeing you on November 16th.
If you don’t already know, Miami Mini Maker Faire is a family-friendly showcase of invention, creativity and resourcefulness, and a celebration of the maker movement. Get tickets to join us on November 16th in Wynwood!
Written by Mike Greenberg, producer for the Miami Mini Maker Faire and a director for Hacklab North Boynton, a non-profit makerspace in Palm Beach County.
The Knight Foundation is a powerhouse catalyst for the tech community in Miami. By creating valuable platforms that allow creative professionals to rally, express and flourish; the Knight Foundation has seeded the community with resources that will launch this region onto the national stage. They are supporters of our venue partners; The LAB Miami, O Cinema, and The Lightbox; which are perfect examples of these valuable platforms. And just recently, they announced their sponsorship of the Miami Mini Maker Faire!
Incredible thanks goes to the Knight Foundation for helping to bring the first Miami Mini Maker Faire home. The event is certain to be a beacon which attracts creative and intellectually-stimulating ideas. The production team, advisors and volunteers all look forward to sharing these experiences with you.
Read the press release about our partnership with the Knight Foundation.
We were featured on the Makezine Blog!
Due to growing demand from folks who wish to show their DIY projects at the Miami Mini Maker Faire, we are opening our Call for Makers for a second round, running through October 27th! If you missed the first round, please apply today to have your projects or products exhibited at Miami Mini Maker Faire by filling out our simple application.
If you scrambled to get your applications in during the first round, don’t fret. All makers who applied by September 30th will receive preferred placement at the Miami Mini Maker Faire, plus be featured on our website by mid-October!
Miami Mini Maker Faire producer, Ric Herrero, wrote a piece for The Miami Herald’s Starting Gate blog on his recent visit to World Maker Faire in NYC and why we’re bringing this exciting event to Miami! Read it at the Starting Gate blog here, or below.
By Ric Herrero
The fourth annual World Maker Faire was held in Queens, NY, this past weekend. For two days, over 70,000 people showed up to meet some 700 makers whose projects ranged from quadcopter drones and 3D printed toys, to solar powered robots and sensor-based gadgets that can wire your entire home and garden to the Internet. The Faire also featured a full outdoor bazaar with artisans selling hand-made clothing, jewelry and home goods, plus circus acrobats, musicians, a life-sized version of the Mouse Trap board game, a Coke and Mentos geyser show, and lots, I mean lots, of rockets.
Think Science Fair-meets-County Fair-meets-Burning Man-meets-Renegade, and you’re only halfway there. Maker Faire is a family-friendly celebration of DIY creativity, resourcefulness and invention, with the kind of “gee-whiz” energy you likely haven’t felt since you first visited Tomorrowland as a kid.
The World Maker Faire in New York is second in size only to the original Maker Faire, which was first held in San Mateo, CA and in 2013 celebrated its eighth annual show with some 900 makers and 120,000 people in attendance. Detroit, Kansas City, Newcastle (UK), Rome and Tokyo are the home of “featured” 2013 Maker Faires (200+ makers), and community-driven, independently organized Mini Maker Faires are now being produced around the United States and the world—including right here in Miami.
Though far from mainstream, the popularity of Maker Faires has surged in recent years for several reasons, not limited to the following:
The first Miami Mini Maker Faire (of which I’m proud to be a producer), will take place on November 16th in Wynwood and will feature both established and emerging regional makers specializing in DIY technology, arts and crafts, including hardware hacking, 3D printing, robotics, handmade goods, urban manufacturing and farming, alternative energy, apparel, artistic performances, craft food and drink, and educational workshops and installations.
Miami has a long tradition of DIY ingenuity and tinkering. Many who have arrived at our shores came with some technical or artisan skill, yet for decades found little opportunity to put their skills to professional use. Recently, as jobs have become scarcer, makers young and old have taken the entrepreneurial route and started their own businesses making things, or using technology to hack traditionally “non-tech” goods into something new, while others still practice their skills as a hobby. However, these talented individuals have yet to coalesce around a “maker movement” as many others have in major cities around the world.
The Miami Mini Maker Faire provides these makers with a unique opportunity to show what they have made and to share what they have learned with their community at large. It will to help foster a sustainable maker culture in our region, and will serve as a bellwether for how far we’ve come as a creative community, and how far we have yet to go.
I strongly encourage any makers who wish to exhibit their work or DIY projects at the Miami Mini Maker Faire to complete our online application by September 30th at www.makerfairemiami.com.
Ric Herrero is co-founder of MIAMade, a non-profit organization dedicated to fostering a sustainable maker culture in the Great Miami area, and producer of the Miami Mini Maker Faire.
Photo of Ric Herrero by Catalina Ayubi.
Your organization will benefit from publicity through our marketing and promotional efforts directed toward makers and DIY-ers in Miami and across South Florida. Seven sponsorship packages are available to appeal to both small and large organizations that want to align with this incredible community extravaganza!
Click here to choose your sponsorship levels and enjoy excellent exposure to this important segment of your target audience.
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