Steampunk Clock Made From A Chipboard Album
Posted by Joe Rotella on Jan 1st 1970



The cover is a collection of sprockets with space between them, so you can see through the openings to the full size page below. When I saw the cover I immediately thought of a clock. Not just any clock, but a clock with a pendulum... and someone to maintain the clock. That idea became the Steampunk Clock with Clock Keeper that just recently appeared in Scott Publication's Just Steampunk Volume 2 magazine (Oct 2012).


When I saw the mesh, I started to think about how cool it would be to see through the mesh to the background. Better still, what if there were lights behind the sprockets! A string of tiny battery operated LEDs from a party supply store would work just fine. I wired the LEDs underneath the sprockets and now the clock could be turned on at night. Tiny lights would appear behind the sprockets to give off a soft glow. There could even be a light in the Clock Keeper's apartment!
There's even a little Want2Scrap bling decorating the wall of the Clock Keeper's apartment.
Here are the basic steps I followed to assemble the clock. If you have questions or need a bit more information, please reach out to me. I'm happy to help. You can connect with me on my facebook page at www.facebook.com/createNcraft.

- To avoid a square front, and to make room for the Clock Keeper's window, cut away the upper right corner of sprockets from the album cover. You can re-attach those at the bottom of the clock to add shape to the overall piece.
- The solid pieces of chipboard are layered, with ¼" balsa wood strips sandwiched between them, to make the entire clock about 1 ½" thick.
- Cut a niche out of the top layers of chipboard to create the Clock Keeper's apartment.
- Cut a "keyhole shape" in the back layers of chipboard to make room for the clock mechanism and the swing of the pendulum arm.
- Paint all the chipboard pieces and balsa strips black before assembling the clock. I used from Mars Black Perfect Pigments™ - Pure Liquid Acrylics™ from USArtQuest.
- Die cut the metal foil for the sprockets and adhere it to the front before assembling the piece. By doing so, you can use clamps or even books to hold the metal in place on the chipboard while your adhesive sets. You can use a liquid adhesive or artist's cement. I ran the pieces through a Xyron to make each one a "sticker" and then applied them to the chipboard.