An interesting coincidence this morning brought together two related posts that crossed my electronic threshold.
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Fantastic Devices to Improve your Steampunk Reality: The Difference Engine
This post ponders a topic that I consider when writing Steampunk/Alternate History: How much real (vs. fantastical) science and technology to include in your writing.
Airships, Automatons, and Aliens...Oh My!
Airships. Steam powered trains. Carriages drawn by mechanical horses, or self-propelled. When most people think of steampunk, these types of images frequently come to mind. Often these images are accompanied by automatons running amok, strange contraptions that bare little, if any resemblance to devices that currently exist, filled with cogs, gears and springs.
When it comes to the technology of a steam punk reality, the expectation seems to be big and impressive. But perhaps in a reality where the steam engine never gave way to the modern internal combustion engine, there is still a chance of a similar technological revolution. Perhaps in a world of steampunk, the world would be forever changed by a single device. A device that could take complex data and simplify it, translating it into information that the common man could use. We have the computer; our steampunk counterparts might have The Difference Engine.
For one…
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Clockwork Alchemy is here!
Clockwork Alchemy is San Jose’s steampunk con and it takes place every Memorial Day weekend (for those not in the US, that’s the last full weekend in May). That means now!
It actually started today, and I got there just in time to set up my table in “Authors’ Row” to sell my book, To Rule the Skies. Clockwork has a fairly strong authors panel track, and they gave me the encouragement to write and publish my book. I read a short excerpt from the book at the Book Launching Party this evening and it went over well.
I’m also giving three presentations–“Building Victoria”, about Victorian engineers, “Beyond Darwin”, in which I present the stories of several Victorian age scientists (but NOT Darwin or Tesla), and “The Technology of Steampunk”, reviewing the immense technological changes that occurred during the 19th Century. Perhaps I’ll expand some of the information into future blog posts!
Whew! I hope I get a chance to see some of the musical groups, and the Artist’s Bazaar!
The American Widow’s Walk: Explaining Victorian-era Architecture for Steampunk Writers – Part One
An Old House Idiosyncracy from the Cogpunk Steamscribe blog



The Widow’s Walk is mainly found on Northern American Victorian-era architecture, though there are examples in other countries. It is called the Widow’s Walk because it is supposedly a place from where wives could keep an eye out for their husbands’ ships. However, since their are many examples of this architectural feature on inland houses without a glimpse of the sea, this is most likely a fabrication.
The Gothic flavour of this myth has all the earmarks of the Victorian obsession with sentimentality: the patience of the faithful wife; the possibility of lost love; the implied promise of the husband’s return; the gloomy yet poetic name. It was also another excuse to add gingerbread and fretwork to ornament the house; which I suspect was the real reason behind the design and construction of the Widow’s Walk. The classic Widow’s Walk is an ornately fenced rooftop platform often with a enclosed cupola, painted in contrasting colours to the rest of the house…
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Victorian cooking & kitchens (1/4)
A few years ago, I visited the Newport mansions, where the Gilded Age rich spent their languorous summers while plotting which daughter to marry off to any number of impoverished British noblemen. I found the kitchens to be the most interesting parts of the tours–maybe because I could envision real people working in them, in contrast to the over-decorated formal parts of the houses.
Around 1800 the first stove that was made to cook on was developed by Benjamin Thompson, it was called the Rumford Stove. (Up to 1800, stoves were mostly used for heating, not for cooking.) One fire was used to heat several pots, which hung in the fire through various holes on top of the stove. This stove however was too large for domestic use.
In 1834 the Oberlin Stove was patented in the US, it was the same technique but made smaller for domestic use. In the following 30 years 90,000 units were sold. During this time, the stoves still worked on wood or coal; while gas was available but it wasn’t used until late in the 19th century.
Towards the end of the 19th century, more and more houses got water and sewer pipes, and also gas pipes (used for light.) These pipes were later used…
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Steampunk at its Design Core
I’ve loved ModVic’s designs ever since I first saw them!
Just like the Victorian era had its “revival” styles–Gothic Revival, Renaissance Revival, etc.–I like to think of the Steampunk Aesthetic as “Victorian Revival”, containing some aspects of Victorian styles, just with a more modern twist.
by
Bruce Rosenbaum, ModVic LLC
It was not until the Summer of 2008 I first heard the word ‘ Steampunk’. A friend had known about the movement and aesthetic and told me we were Steampunking. The description seemed quite odd to me. I understood the ‘steam’ referenced the steam that generated power for the machines and factories of the Victorian and Industrial Age. It was the word ‘punk’ that gave me pause. It brought to mind the more mischievous days of my youth in Marblehead, Massachusetts, but punk is a designation I thought I had outgrown a long time ago.
My wife, Melanie and I started our home restoration business, ModVic, short for Modern Victorian, in June of 2007. Our vision was to combine the best of the Victorian and Industrial ages by incorporating modern technologies and systems of today’s conveniences with Victorian elegance and design. The idea was…
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Steampunk Weekend DIY
Lots of great Steampunk DIY projects!
There’s an abundance of octopus hats this week. That’s the only intro I can think of.
So if you were looking for a tentacle related project, read on!
There are some other cool things too. Somehow I got wrapped up in steampunk octopus stuff and things spiraled out of control form there. I google’d aardvarks for goodness sake. The internet, man. The internet…
Enjoy!
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