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Comments (99)

  • MomsAVoxell
    I remember a day, long, long ago in a dusty, lonely outback Australian town, when Mum would send me down to the library on a Saturday morning to loan the iron, a kettle, and the last weeks’ papers, which she’d return on the very early Monday morning after putting me off on the .. two hour .. bus ride to school.Now I’m sitting in a room full of hard core technology, wondering if I shouldn’t talk to my local technical museum about setting up an 8-bit lending library with a catalog of fully operational machines ..
  • ElijahLynn
    My local library which is part of the Washington county Library system (next to Portland). It's where Hillsboro is, which is where Intel's manufacturing is, also called Silicon Forest, has a Library Of Things!I've checked out a KitchenAid stand mixer, synthesizer, guitar, stud finder, drum machine, ukulele, air quality detector, and many more things.They also have a sewing machine and a. Vitamix.It's amazing! I love being able to check out new things from our library!I think there's an effort towards tool checkout as well in the future! There's a tool library in a couple cities east of us as well that I keep hearing about!PDX has it going on!!!
  • cuvinny
    My library has something similar. Sewing and embroidering machines, 3D printers and even a CNC machine. Most are free to use as long as you bring the material, the only one that I can remember having a cost is the laser cutter but even then it was under 10 bucks an hour. They have a bunch of other things like being able to check out a pass the the state parks and some museum passes.This is the Charleston County library system.
  • whycombinetor
    Denver has this... nominally. 3 machines (2 in circulation, one is a "Display"). 4 week checkout period. 103 current holds. 103*4/2/12 ≈ 17 year wait time.
  • akouri
    Libraries around me have just become a homeless shelter. Pretty sad because the buildings themselves are actually quite nice and I'd use them often if it weren't for the high likelihood of being harassed.
  • felooboolooomba
    If you went into programming because you like making things, odds are high you'll like sewing too. Speaking from experience.
  • mongol
    I am not very fond of this idea. I think libraries are for books, or possibly media. I can see the utility but I think it distracts from the actual purpose.
  • darkvertex
    The main library here in Montreal has a sick makerspace with 3D printers (plastic and resin), wood CNC machines, a digital embroidery machine, button maker, shirt press, hole driller, laser cutter, vacuform and vinyl cutter: https://square.banq.qc.ca/fablabIt's a pretty dope library. They also let you borrow movies, videogames for all consoles and even board games, vinyl records and a few music instruments.
  • LPisGood
    My very small town growing up had sewing machines and they eventually even got a 3D printer. In high school I sewed a heart shaped pillow for a valentines day present; the library provided a bin of free fabric/stuffing as well as the machine. Libraries are awesome.
  • ggandhi
    I signed my daughter up for a library card when she was two. She can't read yet.I believed you can't teach a child to love libraries. You keep taking them, and let the room do the rest. That room do wonders and it did that to me and I am sure will do that to her too.
  • yakkomajuri
    Finnish libraries are fantastic. Many had free-to-use 3D printers as far back as 2012!Libraries are a place of possibilities and fun, and it makes people want to be there. You can imagine the long-term positive impact this has.
  • Plasmoid
    My local library has been running a tool lender library for quite a while. It's quite popular as it rents out both manual and electric tools. This is great when you need an extension ladder but don't want to own an extension ladder.
  • Avicebron
    One of the libraries near me has kayaks for loan as well as picking up the slack when all of the funding for after school programs was slashed. The value of third spaces is slowly creeping back into the public mindspace, but not enough.
  • delichon
    I'd argue that sewing machines are among the most complex, high skill items found in a typical home, above the laptop and car. I find it very hard to keep mine operational. I struggle with it a lot more than I sew with it. They require fine motor skills and scads of parts and supplies. If you plan to rent them, plan for a repair staff or frequent replacements.Compared to a book, a sewing machine is a space ship, and you should see what people can do to a book. To be sustainable it needs a replacement value deposit, which isn't easy for someone who can't afford an entry level model.
  • JackLau
    Iowa has this too, the Des Moines Public Library has a Library of Things with over 50 items.
  • Telaneo
    I really wish my local libraries would offer things like this. I do own a sewing machine, and even if I didn't, I could probably call on a friend if I did need one, but there are several other categories of things this doesn't apply as much too: gardening tools, ladders, skis, a wheelbarrow. If I could just pop in a library and come back when I'm done, that'd be really convenient.I can borrow CDs, DVDs, records, sheet music, games, but those were probably a pretty logical continuation of lending out books, so the jump to random items is probably one that needs justification to the people higher up the chain. Hopefully this will serve as a good example.
  • erelong
    there's things like "tool libraries" and it might be good to see more lending beyond books;some of the libraries I've seen have morphed more into like makerspaces and/or meeting spaces rather than just places to get books
  • jameszol
    I’m trying to privately build a public library in a rural Idaho community. Borrowing sewing machines has been a popular request, as soon as we have space for them. It’s exciting to see that it’s a worldwide desire and not just a rural trend. Very cool to read about how Finland is doubling down on investing in libraries and skill building tools like sewing machines!
  • anon
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  • YeahThisIsMe
    Noo, don't tell the major VC website about libraries.
  • Telemakhos
    Why do the pictures with this article feel so weird? Like, the first one is of a guy in Finland reading a book with an English title while standing in front of a shelf full of books with English titles.
  • karunamurti
    In Japan there's a karaoke chain that rents sewing machine.
  • bobbytheblkbear
    This only works in a high-trust society.
  • Havoc
    > 55% of Finns visit libraries at least once a month.Wait what? That seems insanely high even for a progressive society.As a reference point UK is at 30% on YEARLY STATS NOT MONTHLY>In England, 30% of adults aged 16 and over used a public library service at least once in the previous 12 months.
  • fnord77
    South SF library has sewing machinesSFPL used to have tools until it got ruined.
  • timonoko
    > 1 point by timonoko 67 days ago : A Tour of OodiThese are just echoes of Soviet Era "Cultural Palaces" aka "Folkets Hus" in Socialists-run Sweden. For the "Culture" no one wants to pay their own money for.I visited it only once, using the Toilet. Kinda Scary. It was gender-free, consisting of large locked cubicles, which were mostly occupied as kiosks for drugs and sexual services. Romanian Romas also had permanent presence there. But sadly this gender-free dream was destroyed by the order of the Nazi Polizei.
  • iberator
    Sewing machines are great for computer people: you can train your fashion sense and motor skills(!) - most 'nerds' lack it :)Also it's an incredible women magnet :)
  • queenkjuul
    I always wanted to start a musical instrument library. I loved working in a music store, helping people pick out the right instruments for what they're trying to accomplish, but always constrained by their budget. We had a per-semester rental program for school band students, where we'd take a deposit and rental fees but we'd handle the maintenance and families could save a ton versus buying. Something similar where like, you want to loan out a particular amp or pedal or synth or cymbal or something to go record a record for a week, the library would be there to help you access gear you couldn't normally afford, and I'd be there to keep everything working and help you find the right tool for the job.Maybe someday.
  • white_tiger
    cool
  • panchtatvam
    That's one way to convert a library from home of books to home of everything non-bookish. No way the society is growing dumber day by day.
  • trueno
    i love the one HN thread title a day that hits whatever this mark is. i love this lmao
  • redwood
    Berkeley had a very cool tool lending library
  • nicechianti
    [dead]
  • p1dda
    Socialist wet dream. In reality someone has to pay for all these adults wasting time instead of working for a living.
  • stein1946
    I am not sure I like the direction the modern libraries are taking.Libraries should be places where people pickup books and read them, that's it.They should not be community centers, DYI hobby centers, convention/exhibition places.I feel they have been co-opted by people who have no interest in knowledge acquisition.