The Steampunk Workshop

Home

  • Home
  • Projects
    • Dave Veloz's Mini Mac
    • Steampunk Car - Part 2
    • Steampunk Car - Part 1
    • Dieselpunk Headphone Mod
    • A Victorian RV - Construction
    • A Victorian RV
    • Car Carrier Trailer
    • Etching an iPod
    • Steampunk Flat-Panel LCD Mod
    • A bit of a Pygmalion Moment
    • Copper Plating and Etching Altoids Tins
    • Electrolytic Etching of Brass
    • Electrolytic Machining of Brass - Part II:
    • Jules Vernian Analog Synthesizer
    • Mark Melchior's Cigar Box Guitars
    • Steampunk Car Update - Catalytic Converter on an Aircooled VW Motor
    • Steampunk Recumbent
    • Telegraph Clacks out RSS Feeds
    • Victorian All-in-One PC
    • Wedding Gift Clock
    • a Clockwork Trilobite
    • the Steampunk Stratocaster
  • Feature Articles
  • Steampunk Labs Projects
  • Kerosene Lamp Projects
  • Ephemera
  • Books & Reviews
  • Events
  • Upcycling:
  • Music
  • Steampunk Links
  • Technical Resources - Links
  • Jake's Google Reader Shared Items
  • Site Search

Steampunk Flat-Panel LCD Mod

Jake von Slatt — Fri, 07/20/2007 - 00:00

The Steampunk Keyboard looked terribly anachronistic sitting in front of my Dell 1907FP flat panel monitor and while I hesitated to tear open a $300 monitor that was still under warantee, art must be served.

Dell 1907FP FrontDell 1907FP Back

Inside I found that the whole thing was encased in steel sheet.  I rejected the idea of re-making all of the pieces in brass and went looking for some paint that would give a nice effect.  I settled on a nice gold metalic from Rustoleum with a thin coat of brown Krylon Crystal Color to give it an aged look.

Dell 1907FP metal shieldingkrylon and rustoleum paint

Not too bad! The finish is a good match for the 19th Century gas lamp arms that I bought from Sequential Glass.  It was, in fact, these arms that inspired this project.  As soon as I opened the box they came in I knew instantly what I was going to do with them.

faux brass finish and gas lamp arms

I couldn't find any brass angle for the frame so I bought some brass colored aluminum angle from True Value.  I fabricated "L" shaped pieces of brass for the corners and used self-tapping screws to secure everything.  After all of the pieces were screwed into place I cut the screws flush on the inside with my Dremel.

aluminum frameframe with brass trim pieces

The frame looked a bit bare so I made some brass curly bracket trim pieces

making the brass trim pieces

I cut the brass on the bandsaw and sanded the edges to make them smooth.  Then I bent the trim pieces with this sheet metal brake a friend rescued from the dumpster at his workplace.

sheet metal brakesanding brass

I was going to make a little brass box for the buttons but I went through the box of parts from a grand father clock escapement that I pulled out of the metal recycling dumpster at the town's transfer station and I thought the chime levers would make great controls.

grandfather clock chime levers

I wanted the base to look like marble so I did a Google image serach for large images with the keyword marble and  found this great image which I printed on a color laser and Modge-Podged onto a wooden base.  I made the base with four block feet and I added trim from Michael's that I had painted in the same manner as the monitor's sheet metal.

modge podge marblemaking the feet

A couple of more pieces of trim made the feet.  I screwed the gas lamp arms onto stubs of 1/2" brass gas pipe and press fit them into 11/16" holes in the base.

steampunk monitor base

Here's a close up of the controls, I really like how these turned out.

steampunk monitor controls

Another gold painted piece of trim from Michael's finished off the base.  The knobs that connect the screen to the gas lamp arms are kitchen cabinet knobs from True Value Hardware.

the steampunk monitor

I need to do something about the controls from the back, perhaps a brass cover.

back of the steampunk monitor

A side view.

side view of the steampunk monitor

The Steampunk Desktop - wait, where's the mouse?  Must get to work on that.

the steampunk desktop

By kerosene lamp light . . .

steampunk desktop and kerosene lamp

And finally on black velvet . . .

steampunk monitor and keyboard on black velvet

  • Jake von Slatt
  • Mods
  • Monitor
  • Projects
  • Steampunk
  • Login or register to post comments

Login

What is OpenID?
  • Log in using OpenID
  • Cancel OpenID login
  • Create new account
  • Request new password

Projects:

Keyboard
Altoids Tin Etching

Lightbox

Shop Respirator
Etching Brass
Flash Diffuser
Bus Conversion

All-in-One PC

LCD Monitor

Motorbike

MAC Mini Mod

Etch Machining

iPod Etch

Headphone Mod

Steampunk Strat

Telegraph Build

Steampunk Car

Trilobite Etch

Kerosene Lamps

Trailer

 

Search


Subscribe

Subscribe to our Announcement List:

Your email will never be divulged and we will only make an announcement when there is a genuinely interesting new thing.