@@originami9199 dude what are you talking about i have a whole research paper that was published this month about the physiological overlaps between the digestive and the pulmonary system the other dude is straight on point
This is a super good idea! Put a dollop of epoxy over the LEDs and set some diffuser film in it to really make the LEDs blend together and be nice to look at! Would definitely make the random blinks more interesting to look at in my opinion
@@Jehty21 I think it would be better to flood the LEDs with black opaque compound and then sand it down along with a small layer of the top of the diodes
Smoked perspex sheet might work too, one could stick it on with epoxy, and hides the components, makes it look like a black screen, but lets through the light with not much loss. I've used it on much larger LED projects and it looks really nice.
18:15 I think these would sell like hot cakes. You could easily sell a couple thousand of these. Wouldn't be surprised if someone was in the process of copying and commercializing the design right now
Given all the precision you've shown in other projects, it's actually really cool to hear you say "lazy", and still end up making a grid of 0201 components work. Your half-assing it looks a lot like the rest of us whole-assing it, or even whole-and-a-half-assing.
@@AldenVondyck I'm one of those people and resting my arms on things still helps a lot... still not sure I could pull this off, but I'd be way more likely to
As a woman, an electronics nerd and a hobby manicurist: YES PLEASE! The earrings are gorgeous and I'd love to wear a pair even if it just lights up for an hour! Having something like this as part of a manicure would be a-maze-ing. Also, your soldering skills are out of this world. Hand soldering that absolutely minuscule diode blew me away.
The copper wire on the soldering iron is such a useful tip! I'm going to be (attempting) to repair my laptop myself and I was a little worried about if my iron would be precise enough, but that could save me!
He was only able to do that because there's no pads completely under the component. In a laptop, there's many components that you can't do anything to with a soldering iron.
@@nikkiofthevalleyyou can definitely do a ton of stuff on a laptop with a soldering iron. It's mostly technique. The copper trick is also not the best because it just has so little heat capacity.
a fun use for tiny matrices like this would be eyes/faces for figures? robot character with a digital face or really expressive eyes. maybe a lego scaled grid to add some detail into builds
use an app on my phone to pick an emoticon based on how I'm feeling at the moment you know you've pissed me off because suddenly my :) earrings are going >:(
Found this channel a couple months ago and I absolutely love it. The way he describes things it’s just bananas “it is unusual to be able to justify having a pick-and-place machine in your house” idk that just killed me lol
The stacked PCBs is genius. Really appreciate you showing how the pick and place worked. As someone who also does a lot of LED PCB stuff it's nice to think if I ever need to buy a pick and place machine it's within the realm of reason
In the early 80s when i was about 15 I made some led ear studs, these were a 5mm amber led with the leads clipped short and connected to a 2-transistor blink circuit and battery with thin enameled copper wire. I was surprised that there was some interest by a couple of girls in my class and I sold two. This project is more impressive but there was a wow factor in the day to having a blinking earring too. Being a nerd you can imagine how far I got with those girls...
Everytime I think "I'm done with CZcams", along comes something outstanding like this insanely fiddly project and I'm sucked back down into the maelstrom. Thanks, I think.
For stuff like MCUs which don't need the thermal pad for heat or RF, I usually omit it from the PCB - more room for tracks, and sometimes the large pad can make the part float up if there is too much paste.
Just when you think Mitxela has finally reached the point where hand soldering is no longer possible, he busts out the copperwire tip and proves you wrong. I'm now solely convinced humans will never create a package too small to be hand soldered by Mitxela.
A great substitute for protective epoxy is UV glue. It has a similar end result without being a two-part formula, and with a nice 15-25 second cure time. These are always so fun to watch. Thanks for documenting your process!
I’ve done a lot of screen printing ink on fabric/paper and one of the first things you learn to get consistent application is to hold the squeegee at a higher angle to the screen (probably about 75 degrees). This helps you apply pressure more consistently. The screen bowing down to meet your material is your friend! You basically only want the screen to ever touch the surface of your material once as your squeegee passes over. Every time you have to do another pass risks it being aligned slightly differently and smashing the edges of what was already applied. Not only can that make your edges fuzzy but it can leave paste on the underside of the screen, depositing on the next board you pull. I hope this helps! Idk what kind of tutorials exist for solder stenciling but it’s extremely similar to screen printing and searching for technique videos of that could hopefully help you improve your application.
All of your videos are "interesting electronics I could listen to explanations for for hours", yet at the same time, constantly keeping it interesting. You really understand your audience/youtube
Of course I always wanted a luminescent diode matrix on my ear lobe! The earring projects are so cool, sometime in the future I would love to try to make something like this myself, owning one would be great. Right now though I know only some of the basics of circuit design and don't have acces to some much needed tools
Please keep adding tech to jewelry. There are so many of us who want this stuff. I have a few ideas of cool tech pieces but being blind means not being able to work with the software or doing the assembly of small components. Glad people love being creative and pushing the limits of what’s possible.
I would absolutely wear this earring, just awesome and even more stunning the dual wielding welding on such mini LED's ! Waiting for version 2 or 3.0 with RGB's :D
Great project! I would try putting a dark red filter over it (like on 7 segment displays in clocks etc.) to make the animation easier to see. You could even cover the thing with a colored epoxy.
Been waiting about 40 years for this. No lie.. I was 13yrs old when I pierced my ear with a safety pin .. ahh the 80's. Glad to see the tech has finally arrived.
These are super cool! I would totally wear these as a fun piece of jewelry to a concert, costume party, or rave; especially with how affordable they are to produce. Cuff links or something like a necklace pendant would also be super cool! I think the red/orange LED would also look really good displaying a simple low res fire like animation that flickers gently. Mesmerizing
Saw the thumbnail and thought "Oh, cool. Another DIY project to try." It only took about a minute to realize I'm just a spectator on this one. Bummer but still super cool. Beautiful work!
I just finished soldering my very first custom PCB and I now have SO MUCH MORE respect for the kind of soldering you do. This is absolutely incredible!
I would want this in a button to turn on electronics. It would be so satisfying to see a quick animation when I turn it on. So much better than a few flashing lights for diagnostic purposes as well
My mind settled on "extremely low cost, 3 wire 32x8 LED display board" - you could be all in on parts for under a dollar and you'd still have 2 i/o pins left over to daisy-chain modules together! Very capable microcontrollers.
oh my god, i absolutely need these. Ive never soldered before but i love tiny fiddly projects and also i tend to be into larger dangly earrings--the initial button size would work for earrings for me, maybe i have to try this myself!!!
If you know anyone with stretched ears, you could make these from tunnels - the various sizes would give lots of options for displays, and the battery could go inside the earring itself if it's big enough. I really like this idea, and I know there are absolutely more people who would wear them than you think.
Animated LED fingernail sounds like a great idea. And as @Bleudog mentioned, running Doom on it will be a marvel of engineering. Doing something like gesture control. And there are nice 0202 RGB that can bring it to the next level.
really appreciate this, I've been watching a few pnp videos but I haven't seen anybody explain the process so well. I never knew about the capillary effect helping so much!
A little tip for you if you want to be able to make the leds appear sharper, place window tint film over them, this will hide the individual leds and only show the ones that are lit, adjacent leds pick up the glow and wash it out which the tint would prevent, it would also make filming them a lot easier.
Love your work. That's quite good for your first prong setting. Usually you would bend each entire prong to open it up and bend them closer together in adjoining pairs to set the stone - or micro LED matrix, of course 😊
this is so cool, id absolutely wear these! the small size is really limiting, depending on the size of gauges you could probably do alot more but i think its the difficult limits that make this project so intriguing
"that was a lot easier than i expected..." ... Im just started to work with SMD components like an 2010/1812 and watching this dude "its possible at home" Always great work, great showing of the process, thank you
I would definitely without a question wear this. The errors are too small to notice, so it just looks incredible. I would run hair-thin copper wire to an external battery pack, maybe even hidden in my hair lol
It's only a matter of time before this guy is running DOOM in an earring
Rip and ear!
Imagine he comments "not a bad idea"
that or bad apple
Haha, that's the best idea ever 😂
Crazy
“LED’s which are so small that inhaling them is a very real danger.“
new fear unlocked: accidentally inhaling microscopic electrical components
eh you already are *microplastics*
You'll just shit it out, don't worry
@@0106johnny that is not how inhaling works... you might cough them out at most
@@0106johnny huh? maybe i'm missing sarcasm, but how would a small LED go from your lungs to your digestive system?
@@originami9199 dude what are you talking about i have a whole research paper that was published this month about the physiological overlaps between the digestive and the pulmonary system the other dude is straight on point
Mitxela, I cannot believe you think no one would want to wear these.
I would absolutely wear these.
Right??? I would pierce my ears to wear these lol
@@benjaminbutcher... and you seem to be a guy. Imagine how many girls would want it ;)
I would too!
@@benjaminbutcher Not even joking
Ditto and I wouldn't care if they only lasted 1 hour either?
adding a small layer of milky transparent plastic would help to diffuse the LED's and make them more visible when displaying graphics or letters
This is a super good idea! Put a dollop of epoxy over the LEDs and set some diffuser film in it to really make the LEDs blend together and be nice to look at! Would definitely make the random blinks more interesting to look at in my opinion
@@Jett-n-ginmaybe a diffuser film wouldn't even be needed and just sanding the epoxy would be enough.
@@Jehty21 I think it would be better to flood the LEDs with black opaque compound and then sand it down along with a small layer of the top of the diodes
It could also double as protection for the LEDs
Smoked perspex sheet might work too, one could stick it on with epoxy, and hides the components, makes it look like a black screen, but lets through the light with not much loss. I've used it on much larger LED projects and it looks really nice.
18:15 I think these would sell like hot cakes. You could easily sell a couple thousand of these. Wouldn't be surprised if someone was in the process of copying and commercializing the design right now
I'd buy one
Please sell them mitxela… 🥺🥺🥺🥺😢😢😢 PLEASE!!!
sell yes, make.. well it would be quite an effort :)
@@TheducksOrg I barely know how to solder 😭😭
Absolutely agree
"not convinced anyone would want to wear these" my dude, there are so many people who would wear these. especially at a rave!
I was just thinking this! I’d hella wear these in pink.
Given all the precision you've shown in other projects, it's actually really cool to hear you say "lazy", and still end up making a grid of 0201 components work. Your half-assing it looks a lot like the rest of us whole-assing it, or even whole-and-a-half-assing.
😂 whole-and-a-half assing.... adding that one to my reserves
Man, my hands were shaking just by looking at that copper wire soldering tip!! You have a very steady hands!
My heart started pounding!
it's much easier when u rest the forearm on something and move just from the wrist or fingers
@@sFeral
but some people have these innate jitteriness in their hands so idk bout that
@@AldenVondyck personally speaking, resting my forearms on something helps immensely but yeah, at this scale I don’t know if that matters haha
@@AldenVondyck I'm one of those people and resting my arms on things still helps a lot... still not sure I could pull this off, but I'd be way more likely to
I feel like all of your videos start with "Have you ever wanted...no?"
But you are making all of the things I didn't realize I wanted!
Right? Like, no, I didnt. But I do now!
I lol'd
Yeah, he said that and I was protesting. I do want that!
Genuinely, this probably would be really popular with women's tech wear fashion.
Sir you have a horrifying avatar
As a woman, an electronics nerd and a hobby manicurist:
YES PLEASE!
The earrings are gorgeous and I'd love to wear a pair even if it just lights up for an hour! Having something like this as part of a manicure would be a-maze-ing.
Also, your soldering skills are out of this world. Hand soldering that absolutely minuscule diode blew me away.
Seconded, I’d love earrings like this
The copper wire on the soldering iron is such a useful tip! I'm going to be (attempting) to repair my laptop myself and I was a little worried about if my iron would be precise enough, but that could save me!
He was only able to do that because there's no pads completely under the component. In a laptop, there's many components that you can't do anything to with a soldering iron.
Are there any commercial addressable cob arrays like this?
Pun intended? 😂
@@nikkiofthevalleyyou can definitely do a ton of stuff on a laptop with a soldering iron. It's mostly technique. The copper trick is also not the best because it just has so little heat capacity.
I would recommend training on some lesa valuable circuitry before taking risks with your laptop.
a fun use for tiny matrices like this would be eyes/faces for figures? robot character with a digital face or really expressive eyes. maybe a lego scaled grid to add some detail into builds
A lot of people do similar things with Gundam model kits and addressable RGB LEDs! They can get as small as 1mm
This reminds me about RP2040 backed displays in two stud wide bricks by @ancientjames
use an app on my phone to pick an emoticon based on how I'm feeling at the moment
you know you've pissed me off because suddenly my :) earrings are going >:(
Found this channel a couple months ago and I absolutely love it. The way he describes things it’s just bananas “it is unusual to be able to justify having a pick-and-place machine in your house” idk that just killed me lol
Yeah, and referring to himself as a "hobbyist"
if it's just a glorified 3d printer then i should be able to build my own.......>>>
The stacked PCBs is genius. Really appreciate you showing how the pick and place worked. As someone who also does a lot of LED PCB stuff it's nice to think if I ever need to buy a pick and place machine it's within the realm of reason
> I'm not fully convinced anyone would want to wear these
inb4 me thinking where I should get pierced to wear one
exactly this
Amazing project! Heartbeat sensor with the lights synchronized to the heartbeat would be cool!
A heartbeat animation in itself would be cool.
I like how the sound cuts out at 17:45 so we're not distracted by mitxela shrieking "goddammit get in there" at the microdot
I held my breath at this point, didn't want to "blow the LED away" 😂
Why do I feel like I need that matrix led jacket.
Dope and unusual project as always.
cyberpunk drip
Jesus. If I lose a laptop screw I get pissed off. I can't imagine doing anything at this level.
if I lose a huge, easy to find Ikea component I ragequit already. props to you.
😂 Hey use a piece of tape if you dont have a magnet! That's what I used to do. I feel your pain. It's impressive, like watch repair!
My level of complexity is replacing a refrigerator evaporator fan motor.
If you lose a surface mount component - it's gone. They leap into alternate dimensions. Ignore it and get another one.
You can't convince me otherwise this man is a Cyberpunk CEO in the making.
In the early 80s when i was about 15 I made some led ear studs, these were a 5mm amber led with the leads clipped short and connected to a 2-transistor blink circuit and battery with thin enameled copper wire. I was surprised that there was some interest by a couple of girls in my class and I sold two.
This project is more impressive but there was a wow factor in the day to having a blinking earring too.
Being a nerd you can imagine how far I got with those girls...
Everytime I think "I'm done with CZcams", along comes something outstanding like this insanely fiddly project and I'm sucked back down into the maelstrom. Thanks, I think.
If it weren't for the battery life, I can see these selling quite well. Looks amazing!
For stuff like MCUs which don't need the thermal pad for heat or RF, I usually omit it from the PCB - more room for tracks, and sometimes the large pad can make the part float up if there is too much paste.
Why aren't more earrings like this?? This is such a cool concept.
I feel like this video highlighted extremely well why earrings never are like this XD it's a huge pain
@ruolbu idkk i feel like someone could definitely do it now with this video as reference
Just when you think Mitxela has finally reached the point where hand soldering is no longer possible, he busts out the copperwire tip and proves you wrong. I'm now solely convinced humans will never create a package too small to be hand soldered by Mitxela.
Soldering the two PCBs back to back is a stroke of genius! Really amazing to produce something on a scale this tiny, all in a home lab.
this guy is quite litteraly sitting on a gold mine with these, and he's severely underestimating how much people want them
This is actually sick and I would absolutely buy this
A great substitute for protective epoxy is UV glue. It has a similar end result without being a two-part formula, and with a nice 15-25 second cure time.
These are always so fun to watch. Thanks for documenting your process!
I’ve done a lot of screen printing ink on fabric/paper and one of the first things you learn to get consistent application is to hold the squeegee at a higher angle to the screen (probably about 75 degrees). This helps you apply pressure more consistently. The screen bowing down to meet your material is your friend! You basically only want the screen to ever touch the surface of your material once as your squeegee passes over. Every time you have to do another pass risks it being aligned slightly differently and smashing the edges of what was already applied. Not only can that make your edges fuzzy but it can leave paste on the underside of the screen, depositing on the next board you pull. I hope this helps! Idk what kind of tutorials exist for solder stenciling but it’s extremely similar to screen printing and searching for technique videos of that could hopefully help you improve your application.
This is very useful advice, thank you!
All of your videos are "interesting electronics I could listen to explanations for for hours", yet at the same time, constantly keeping it interesting. You really understand your audience/youtube
Love this content. "it takes 3 attempts before asking for help, it's kind of cute" 🤣
I would definitely wear that! Again u never fail to disappoint
I don't think that sentence meant what you meant it to. Unless you think he always disappoints? 🤔
@@gregwessendorf😂
Lmao😂 yea opposite of what I said💀
“Have you ever wanted a LED matrix on your earlobe? No? Well. Let’s make it happen anyway.”
This is the most “Marker thing” a person could say.
Even just an LED pin to pop on your shirt or hat or something would be an awesome use case for this. Love the micro-soldering vids!
Of course I always wanted a luminescent diode matrix on my ear lobe! The earring projects are so cool, sometime in the future I would love to try to make something like this myself, owning one would be great. Right now though I know only some of the basics of circuit design and don't have acces to some much needed tools
Another mitxela classic
Please keep adding tech to jewelry. There are so many of us who want this stuff. I have a few ideas of cool tech pieces but being blind means not being able to work with the software or doing the assembly of small components. Glad people love being creative and pushing the limits of what’s possible.
That's insanely cool! Ring next?
plus it could also hold a larger battery
It’s always a good day when you upload, I love these videos so much
⁉️
I would unironically pay a lot of money for these, I love seeing all of the wearable led matrices!
I would absolutely wear this earring, just awesome and even more stunning the dual wielding welding on such mini LED's !
Waiting for version 2 or 3.0 with RGB's :D
Love to see someone make a led cube out of these
Cool. Now play bad apple on it!
17:51 In the middle there is another defective LED, but the project and idea are brilliant, congratulations !!
Great project! I would try putting a dark red filter over it (like on 7 segment displays in clocks etc.) to make the animation easier to see. You could even cover the thing with a colored epoxy.
LED Matrix Prince Albert when?
“In the interest of laziness”, and there are so many more cute sayings. I may try to work them into casual conversation. Thanks!
Been waiting about 40 years for this. No lie.. I was 13yrs old when I pierced my ear with a safety pin .. ahh the 80's. Glad to see the tech has finally arrived.
i think it takes a certain level of insanity to attempt something like this! i cannot wait to see more from this insane man. subscribed.
These are super cool! I would totally wear these as a fun piece of jewelry to a concert, costume party, or rave; especially with how affordable they are to produce. Cuff links or something like a necklace pendant would also be super cool! I think the red/orange LED would also look really good displaying a simple low res fire like animation that flickers gently. Mesmerizing
I recommend the lumen PNP for open source Pick and place machines. Great video
Saw the thumbnail and thought "Oh, cool. Another DIY project to try." It only took about a minute to realize I'm just a spectator on this one. Bummer but still super cool. Beautiful work!
I just finished soldering my very first custom PCB and I now have SO MUCH MORE respect for the kind of soldering you do. This is absolutely incredible!
I would want this in a button to turn on electronics. It would be so satisfying to see a quick animation when I turn it on. So much better than a few flashing lights for diagnostic purposes as well
I am somewhat in awe of the nonchalant way you tackle these outstanding projects!
I discovered this channel a few months ago and can't get enough! I love these projects.
This is unbelievably cool, the narration and rythm are spot on, and props to the model.
This is so sick, I wish I had your smarts and talents. Seriously man, you’re amazing 🤩
Back with another FRICKIN AWESOME video!! Incredible work as always!
Your projects are unbelievably cool.
mitxela just keeps on impressing me with every video being more and more complex tiny things
I love how TINY you build these things! I hope you keep making such things.
The way you said ''inhaling them is a very real danger'' implied that someone has learned this the hard way haha
Looking forward to your inevitable LED matrix contact lens video.
My mind settled on "extremely low cost, 3 wire 32x8 LED display board" - you could be all in on parts for under a dollar and you'd still have 2 i/o pins left over to daisy-chain modules together! Very capable microcontrollers.
your projects looks crazy🤯🔥
but those inspiring me every time I see your videos, thanks for your content 😌✊
all of ths is amazing.
the tech, the process, the look and the presentation.
oh my god, i absolutely need these. Ive never soldered before but i love tiny fiddly projects and also i tend to be into larger dangly earrings--the initial button size would work for earrings for me, maybe i have to try this myself!!!
End result looks absolutely mesmerizing
You're my kind of nerd; thank you for sharing your projects. Your ability to film this is impressive.
i’m LOVING these videos!!
If you know anyone with stretched ears, you could make these from tunnels - the various sizes would give lots of options for displays, and the battery could go inside the earring itself if it's big enough. I really like this idea, and I know there are absolutely more people who would wear them than you think.
This is absolutely insane, awesome work!
Animated LED fingernail sounds like a great idea.
And as @Bleudog mentioned, running Doom on it will be a marvel of engineering. Doing something like gesture control.
And there are nice 0202 RGB that can bring it to the next level.
I thought that video was brilliant! The information, the scripting, narration, and presentation were exceptional. Thank you
Such an inspiring high level DIY project! Hats off, sir!
I would definitely wear it! Im thinking about such a project for quite a while. Its so cool!
Absolute mad lad, such a lovely creation
This is more or less exactly what I wanted to do since I discovered 0201 leds. Of course you made it much better than I ever could
delicate and beautiful work. Was soothing to watch. Kudos!
really appreciate this, I've been watching a few pnp videos but I haven't seen anybody explain the process so well. I never knew about the capillary effect helping so much!
A little tip for you if you want to be able to make the leds appear sharper, place window tint film over them, this will hide the individual leds and only show the ones that are lit, adjacent leds pick up the glow and wash it out which the tint would prevent, it would also make filming them a lot easier.
Love your work.
That's quite good for your first prong setting. Usually you would bend each entire prong to open it up and bend them closer together in adjoining pairs to set the stone - or micro LED matrix, of course 😊
I would definetely wear this. It is well made and looks rather pretty!
this is so cool, id absolutely wear these! the small size is really limiting, depending on the size of gauges you could probably do alot more but i think its the difficult limits that make this project so intriguing
Uh... you are a dude
Perhaps try making it into a plug for stretched ears. Loved the video! Great dedication. Id love wearing the plug or stretcher 😊
I think what really could hlep your channel, is getting an profile picture, amazing work
162k subscribers, and 162k views in a day, perfection
excellent video and incredible jewelry
ooh man, this looks so magical
Having the leds change shape/animation by sensing skin temperature or heat beat would be pretty hot
dude your led jewlery is DOPE
That soldering iron hack! Great work!
"that was a lot easier than i expected..."
...
Im just started to work with SMD components like an 2010/1812 and watching this dude "its possible at home"
Always great work, great showing of the process, thank you
Wow, I didn't fully realize the scale until seeing them in situ. Very impressive and captivating to look at!
Simply amazing. I can wait to see your next project.
I would definitely without a question wear this. The errors are too small to notice, so it just looks incredible. I would run hair-thin copper wire to an external battery pack, maybe even hidden in my hair lol
youve just become the first electronic display jewellery designer!! awesome,,Bravo to your skill and hardwork.👍
12:02 no truer words have been spoken. Life lessons for sure. Great work!! Also these are freaking cool!