World

10-year-old becomes Russia's youngest inventor

MOSCOW: A 10-year-old Moscow girl has become Russia's youngest inventor after she patented her own print-making method. According to the Moskovsky Komsomolets daily, Anastasia Rodimina p

From our online archive

MOSCOW: A 10-year-old Moscow girl has become Russia's youngest inventor after she patented her own print-making method.

According to the Moskovsky Komsomolets daily, Anastasia Rodimina patented her own method of monotyping -- a print-making technique when a smooth surface is covered by paint and a piece of paper then pressed to it to make a single print.

Under Rodimina's patented method, which she named "energoinformation monotyping", a monotype is covered by a paper application and put in direct sunlight to let the unprotected ink fade.

The discovery was made accidentally when the girl forgot one of her monotypes, partially covered by a piece of paper, on a windowsill. She eventually discovered that though ink on most of the picture has faded, colours remained unaffected under the piece of paper, creating a unique pattern.

Relatives said a neurology hospital has expressed interest in the invention, which it plans to use as a part of art therapy.

An advertising agency said it was also interested in using Rodimina's monotyping technology.

The girl said she wanted to use her invention to create a game "helping children to develop their imagination".

Until recently, Russia's youngest inventor was 11-year-old Vladislav Koren from Angarsk in Siberia's Irkutsk region. Last year, he successfully patented his own version of a slot car racetrack.

Sky is not the limit, India must guard the final frontier

Hyderabad man loses Rs 2 crore to AI trading scam

Prehistoric human skeletons excavated in Karnataka's Ballari district

On the run for stealing wheat worth Rs 100, man held after 45 years in MP

Pizza maker, physical education teacher, cab driver in Italian mix

SCROLL FOR NEXT