Lux Blox BLOG

Developing Lux Blox: Families, Friends, and a Caring Community

Lux is the culmination of husband and wife team Mike and Heather Acerra’s life long fascination with nature, architecture, science, and working with kids. In 2010 they began a project with their children and their friends called “Project Lux”. They had play groups in which they worked in a back yard maker space creating different types of toys and construction methods. The Lux Project became an obsession, and the Acerra household was taken over by the sights, sounds and smells of 3D printers, tubs and tubs of prototype construction toys, and a small army of neighborhood kids testing out ideas and drawing AutoCAD designs. By 2013 the Acerra’s submitted drafts of their first patents and began developing what would be the first Lux part. American Made The Acerra's were determined to make their product in the USA and continue to keep their company’s values centered on the families and communities that helped them develop Lux. When they first began creating the product they had the raw materials sent from factories around Illinois to a barn in the forests of Cameron , Illinois. During the summer and most of the fall of 2015, with the help of friends and children (usually only being paid in toys and pizza), they worked tirelessly, packaging, and shipping out the first Lux products. As orders began piling in from around the nation and overseas, the Acerra’s realized they needed help. In what seemed like serendipity they were approached by a local organization called Bridgeway, a not-for-profit agency, that empowers people with disabilities by offering training opportunities and the creation of meaningful employment. The folks at Bridgeway were interested in helping a new local company and were excited by the prospect of making toys. This partnership was a Godsend for the Acerras and offered their young company a manufacturing solution that met with their values of making a product in the US as close to home and with as much community involvement as possible. Today Lux products are made and supplied by partners in Missouri , Illinois, and Wisconsin, and are centralized between Galesburg and Macomb. Many of those same children and their families continue to be a vital part of the company and many of them are still working for Lux as designers, draftsman, testers, and video instructors. Lux is and will continue to be all about making connections and finding meaning through work and play. Mike Acerra

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Developing Lux Blox:  Families, Friends, and a Caring Community

Free Online Drawing Lessons for Kids With Video Instructions

Written by Mike Acerra  Now is a fantastic time to learn drawing. The Doodle Method was created to teach kids a natural and fun way to draw the world. Before my wife Heather and I created a construction toy to get kids building using nature’s design principles, we had an art school in our home.   We created what we called the Doodle Method. It is based on using the lines that are already natural for our hands to form.  Children old enough for handwriting lessons are of the appropriate skill level for these lessons.  This method will help your child to:  Build hand-eye coordination Learn about art history Build confidence through skill mastery Gain the skills that form the foundation for handwriting Connecting children to nature through drawing and other hands-on activities is a rewarding exercise with long-lasting benefits.  It builds foundational skills and knowledge to enhance understanding of STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art, and math) subjects through awareness of the patterns found in nature and mathematical relationships.  An Example From History Greek ceramicists painted decorative patterns on vessels such as the one shown on this 2700-year-old ceramic pot to make them more attractive and easier to sell in ancient marketplaces.  This type of doodle art was used on ceramics in civilizations throughout the world.  Start with Baby Steps Like learning to walk, it is best to take small steps at first when learning to draw. It is important to understand the true power of the doodle and the scribble. When people scribble and doodle they are usually very relaxed and their mind is often occupied with other things. They are merely making lines that are easy and pleasurable for their hands and images that are simple and pleasant to their eyes. This is a very natural state of “art play”. In this video series, you will learn fundamental drawing skills by doodling with letters. The Lux Blox Daily Doodle #1 The S-Rule   In the first video, we learn the S-rule.  The S-rule is a powerful technique for drawing and design because it creates the illusion of three dimensions- what I call “punching the form” with the S.  The S traces the curviness of natural things, which tricks the eyes into believing that what it is looking at is three dimensional. The S is a very natural line to draw and the more comfortable you become making S’s the more fun drawing will be.   The Lux Blox Daily Doodle #2 The S and C Rules: The Overlapping Perspective In the Daily Doodle #2, we continue exploring the S rule and the C rule as a way to learn the illusion of overlapping perspective.  In this video, I show you how we can use the S and C rule to create plants, animals, and even the human face using the visual shorthand developed in the Italian Renaissance. The Lux Blox Daily Doodle #3 Mandalas using the Z-Rule! The Z-Rule is another powerful technique to help you make mandalas and the illusion of knots using simple natural lines. This Z or zigzag rule has been used by artisans for thousands of years. It's an effective means of creating the illusion of three dimensions from one simple line. In this video, I also explore other doodling techniques like creating rosettes and geometric spirals.  The Lux Blox Daily Doodle #4  Spirals are a Gift from the Universe  Your hand was built to make beautiful spiral lines! Nature gave us a wonderful gift - it builds itself with spirals!  Learn how the S-rule and the C-rule, when combined with the speed and power of the spiral, works to bring three dimensions into view.  Take your time. Remember, this is just doodling!  Make your own designs with the S-rule. Make mistakes and have fun! And if you want to learn it faster, teach someone else what you just learned! Want to learn more? Continue on to lesson 2 by clicking here.

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Free Online Drawing Lessons for Kids With Video Instructions

Free Online Drawing Lessons for Kids with Video Instructions: Lesson 3

Lesson 3: Form Truncation By Mike Acerra If you missed our previous lessons, you can find them by clicking Lesson One and Lesson Two respectively.  Daily Doodle #8 Doodling three-dimensional forms.  In this video you will doodle simple forms such as  prisms, pyramids, cylinders, cones, and spheres with the illusion of three dimensions.   Then, you will learn to slice these forms into pieces, called truncations.  Finally, you will learn to create a powerful form called the lune. The lune is the shape of a lemon wedge.  It is called a ‘lune’ after the word luna, which means the moon. Nature loves this form and uses it everywhere. Even our eyelids are lune shaped!  Daily Doodle #9 Doodling Compound Forms - Seeing with X-Ray Eyes  It is exciting to be able to see and draw the shapes that form the building blocks of the complex structures in our world.  Compound forms are combinations of parts of multiple forms.  Almost everything in life - from man-made to nature-made - is a compound form. Doodling these forms will give you an ability to see the forms within things and have artistic X-RAY EYES!!

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Free Online Drawing Lessons for Kids with Video Instructions: Lesson 3

Free Online Drawing Lessons for Kids with Video Instructions: Lesson 2

Lesson 2: Doodling the Face  By Mike Acerra  #LuxQuarantineArtClub #luxcorner In this lesson, we will learn to doodle three views of the head. The side, or profile view, the front view, and the three-quarter view.  We will rely on the S and C rules we learned in the last lesson.   Profile View of the Head  In this video, we learn how to draw the side view or profile view of the head. We will use the number nine to help us organize the head into different parts.    Doodling the Front View of the Head In this video, we will cover doodling the front view head so that all parts are placed correctly. You will learn to utilize an egg shape to divide the face evenly in half horizontally and vertically to ensure symmetry and proper eye placement.    Doodling the 3/4 view of the face  The three-quarter view is the view between the front view and the profile (side view). When we draw the three-quarter view we will use another “rule of nine”.  Remember that this is doodling, so it should be fun and even funny!  There is a long tradition of drawing people out of proportion and incorrectly on purpose.  Leonardo da Vinci’s comedians are a very famous drawing of caricatures, shown below: The French Impressionist painter, Claude Monet, made his classmates laugh when he would doodle funny pictures of their teachers.  Shown below. 

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Free Online Drawing Lessons for Kids with Video Instructions: Lesson 2