
The first iteration of this project went from initial idea to working prototype in about 4 hours, a new record for myself and a testament to the power of open software/hardware. I had been teaching at the FSU STEM Camp all week with my usual geek attire (8-bit tie, PCB tie, LED Lab coat) and the kids asked me what ‘outrageously cool’ thing I was gonna wear on the last day. The problem was I had nothing left in my closet and feared I would let them down. So when I went home exhausted that night (it’s tough teaching over 100 8th graders to solder!) and sat down at the work bench trying to decide what I could do in a night. Inspired by Adafruit’s Amplie-Tie, this is what I came up with.
This will be a short post as this is only revision 1 and I plan to vet this out to a more thought out project at some point. Here’s a video of what I had at the end of the night: (skip to bottom of page for newest video)
The tie is made out of 80 WS2811 based RGB LED pixels and is driven by a DigiSpark microcontroller. I pulled in this library written in assembly to drive the display and modified this tetris engine heavily to suit my needs. With limited RAM I had to strip out unneeded features and optimize the code that runs the game similar to Tetris to make it work, I also converted it to support color values as it was originally monochrome only. The code is a definite WIP but posted on here on Github as I play with it in the future. Game moves are random and I plan to attempt some puzzle solving algorithms soon. I had all parts on hand and total project cost comes in around $50.
It’s powered by 2 18650 Li-Ion battery cells in a battery box I used for my Wedding Suit and had lying around. They are installed in a 3D printed battery box with switch.
Structurally it’s just two pieces of card stock with fun bits sandwiched between and taped to a cheap clip-on. I plan to revisit the design and embed the strips directly into a fabric tie for long term use. Remember, I only did this in a single night. The kids loved it and the mission was accomplished.
Future Features
Next I’d like to add a basic AI to play the game, and/or a bluetooth connection for a human to play the game using a smart phone.
Update 1
I’ve restructured the tie so that the LEDs are now embedded into the tie instead of pasted on the front. It looks much cleaner now, thought the LEDs are dimmer, diffused by the fabric. I’ve also rewritten a new program that simulates a firework display, in time for Independence Day parties.
Update 2
I’ve built a second tie run by an Arduino Pro mini with all electronics and battery built into the tie itself. No more extruding wires. The battery is an older aftermarket Samsung Galaxy S1 cell phone battery, and I designed and printed a battery holder with my Makerbot. The LED driver library has been switched to Adafruit’s Neopixel library, and a AI player has been written by Mofidul Jamal.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.
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85 Comments.
[…] bald der Vergangenheit angehören. Das Konzept stammt von dem US-amerikanischen Tüftler Bill Porter und befindet sich aktuell noch in der Entwicklungsphase. Die Krawatte lässt sich momentan mit […]
[…] geeks que hemos visto hasta ahora ni, seguramente, las que vendrán después. Pero la propuesta de Bill Porter es curiosa: una corbata con LEDs que permite jugar al Tetris mediante cualquier móvil con […]
I’m interested in buying the Tetris led tie and the amplie sound led tie. Can you please send me a link so I may purchase these items.
-john
I too am intrested in buy some how do I go about this?
I want one. Put me on a list to be inline for first offering.
Hey Bill, I liked this so much I needed my own. I made my own version using 5 strips of 20 LED of WS2811, using a Teensy 2.0 microcontroller. I forked your project and added a rudimentary AI even, check it out sometime!
https://github.com/bobomb/LEDTetrisTie
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[…] Pueden ver mucho más detalles de la corbata Tetris y demás proyectos de Bill Porter en su blog. […]
[…] LED Tetris Tie BillPorter.Info […]
[…] an LED lab coat and an 8-bit tie, but they wanted to know what was next. So Porter invented the Tetris tie, a glowing LED tribute to the classic falling-blocks […]
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can I buy a kit?
Awesome project, I have tinkered with Arduino and electronics before, was hoping you might be able to put together a super simple wiring diagram for us tinker’s to follow, I have been trying to trace the wires back from the photos but not entirely sure what parts you are using (I can look up sources online but want to know what to look for!!!)
Thanks, and keep up the good work!
I have a wedding coming up and i would love to wear this. is there a way to buy one or get instructions to make one? i would rather buy it thou.
[…] plus d’indications sur comment fabriquer cette cravate beta en attendant ses améliorations par ici… et histoire de vous inspirer, sachez que ce gars a eu le bon goût de faire un mariage […]
I love these ties. I’ve been looking for something to blow people away with when i dress up and i want both of these. I also wanted to check up and see how the Bluetooth connection is coming so if I do get the tie could my friends play?