In the summer of 2001 I had a chance to travel
through Western and Central Europe by train. I had some sort of memorable
experience on every ride I took, ranging from meeting
a new traveling companion to having the conductor try to over charge me
for a ticket.
I kept most of the train tickets from the trip, and put them in a scrapbook
when I got home, as a way to remember things that happened.
The tickets are all
different shapes and sizes, and are marked or "validated" in various ways.
Some machines punch holes in tickets, others print the date and time the
ticket was used, others leave an invisible mark on a magnetic
strip on the card. Whenever I came across a machine which made interesting
marks on tickets, I tried to use it to make a mark in my travel journal. While some train tickets are beautifully designed, very little thought has gone into others. In all, the punched ticket serves to reminds one of the place it comes from.
The Ticket Puncher explores this property of train tickets. I experimented with
using solenoids to punch holes in the paper, and using various mechanisms
to print ink on the paper. I wanted to develop a mechanism which would
allow the person whose ticket was being stamped to have some control over
the visual forms that appeared on it.
I constructed a machine
with a slot on top in which one can place a ticket. Once the ticket is
in the machine, two wheels rotate the ticket while an ink-jet print head
marks it. One can create different patterns on the ticket
by grabbing and rotating the ticket during the printing process.
An image which would be uninteresting when printed on a static
piece of paper becomes much more interesting when printed onto rotating
paper. In one sense it is a computational form, though the computation
is performed by the physical act of rotating the ticket during the printing
process.
The case of the machine
is made out of several aluminum plates, which I cut on a water-jet cutter
and band saw, and then sand blasted. I then bent and bolted the plates
together to achieve the final form. The printing process is controlled by some Java code running on a SaJe microcontroller.