Dominic Wilcox, the inventor who transforms the ordinary into the extraordinary

The British designer explains the secrets behind his “Little Inventors” project which, over a period of three years, has travelled the world, involving thousands of children.

The first workshop, which took place in Sunderland in October 2015 with 450 children, was supposed to be a one-off event. It was, however, an immediate and viral success and, three years later, the “Little Inventors” workshop created by the British designer Dominic Wilcox has spread worldwide. In practice, aspiring inventors (between the ages of 4 and 13) are invited to design their own ideas. Some of these are then created by artisans, or “makers”. The most popular include a fruit bowl which warns you when the contents are about to expire, and a family scooter (which has become part of the collection at the V&A in London). But how do you teach children to design? “Children have a naturally creative approach. The real challenge lies in encouraging them to communicate their ideas. The first step is to create a relaxing and calm environment and atmosphere. Each time, we concentrate on a theme, for example food waste, and we begin by providing information. Not too much, we don’t want to cause confusion. At this point, we ask the children to begin discussing in groups. It is a fundamentally important step, because talking about your thoughts helps you to think”.

The Worry Shredder This worry shredder shreds worries and prints out solutions and gives you a chocolate.

Inventor: Thomas 8 anni, London, UK
Maker: Gareth – Machines Room, London, UK

The Worry Shredder This worry shredder shreds worries and prints out solutions and gives you a chocolate.

Inventor: Thomas 8 anni, London, UK
Maker: Gareth – Machines Room, London, UK

The Worry Shredder

Inventor: Thomas 8 anni, London, UK
Maker: Gareth – Machines Room, London, UK

The Worry Shredder

Inventor: Thomas 8 anni, London, UK
Maker: Gareth – Machines Room, London, UK

The Worry Shredder

Inventor: Thomas 8 anni, London, UK
Maker: Gareth – Machines Room, London, UK

The Worry Shredder

Inventor: Thomas 8 anni, London, UK
Maker: Gareth – Machines Room, London, UK

The water bottle that can't be knocked down I think if you have tea or coffee it won't fall even if you push it because it has a strong magnet on the bottom of it so you only pull it to get it off the ground.

Inventor: Taye, 10 anni, London, UK
Maker: Josie King

The water bottle that can't be knocked down I think if you have tea or coffee it won't fall even if you push it because it has a strong magnet on the bottom of it so you only pull it to get it off the ground.

Inventor: Taye, 10 anni, London, UK
Maker: Josie King

The Fit Foot The Fit Foot is a boot that collects electricity through all of your activity. The Fit Foot works by you walking 500 steps and you can charge your phone or you can have 30 minutes of light in a room in your house. You can get it in multiple times.

Inventor: Mark, 9 years old, Belfast
Maker: The Nerve Centre in Belfast

The Fit Foot The Fit Foot is a boot that collects electricity through all of your activity. The Fit Foot works by you walking 500 steps and you can charge your phone or you can have 30 minutes of light in a room in your house. You can get it in multiple times.

Inventor: Mark, 9 years old, Belfast
Maker: The Nerve Centre in Belfast

6 leg chair My invention is used for people that rock on their chair and not get hurt. So what it does is when you fall off the two other legs come out and plant into the ground so you don't fall off.

Inventor: Max, 8 years old, Tamworth, UK
Maker: Chelsea Vivash

6 leg chair My invention is used for people that rock on their chair and not get hurt. So what it does is when you fall off the two other legs come out and plant into the ground so you don't fall off.

Inventor: Max, 8 years old, Tamworth, UK
Maker: Chelsea Vivash

With this method, Wilcox’s “Little Inventors” has travelled the globe various times. The latest was the “Sharjah Children’s Biennial”, where 4,000 children from 14 countries sent in their ideas. Forty-four of these were turned into prototypes and models by designers, artisans and artists (exhibited until 20 March at the Mughaider Children’s Centre). There is a bottle of water that can’t be knocked over thanks to a magnet in the bottom; the Love Heart Jacket which renders you visible even in the midst of a storm; the Fit Foot, which produces electricity as you walk, and a six-legged chair which stops people who lean back from falling.

We ask the children to begin discussing in groups. It is a fundamentally important step, because talking about your thoughts helps you to think.
Family scooter The family scooter works by all the family push and it rides. It would be great for a big family. In 2017, the scooter was acquired by the Victoria & Albert Museum.

Inventor: Wendy, 9 years old, Sunderland, UK
Maker: AMAP, Faculty of Engineering & Advanced Manufacturing at the University of Sunderland

Family scooter The family scooter works by all the family push and it rides. It would be great for a big family.

Inventor: Wendy, 9 years old, Sunderland, UK
Maker: AMAP, Faculty of Engineering & Advanced Manufacturing at the University of Sunderland

Family scooter The family scooter works by all the family push and it rides. It would be great for a big family.

Inventor: Wendy, 9 years old, Sunderland, UK
Maker: AMAP, Faculty of Engineering & Advanced Manufacturing at the University of Sunderland

No Plooshon (Pollution) Jacket The No Plooshon Jacket keeps car fumes away from the person wearing it.

Inventor: Gruff, 6 years old, London
Maker: Barley Massey

No Plooshon (Pollution) Jacket The No Plooshon Jacket keeps car fumes away from the person wearing it.

Inventor: Gruff, 6 years old, London
Maker: Barley Massey

The alarm cup The alarm cup is a device that you use to prevent your food from expiring.

Inventor: Rumaan, 11 years old, Grasby, UK
Maker: Dominic Wilcox and ceramicist Donnas Peterson

The alarm cup The alarm cup is a device that you use to prevent your food from expiring.

Inventor: Rumaan, 11 years old, Grasby, UK
Maker: Dominic Wilcox and ceramicist Donnas Peterson

The alarm cup The alarm cup is a device that you use to prevent your food from expiring.

Inventor: Rumaan, 11 years old, Grasby, UK
Maker: Dominic Wilcox and ceramicist Donnas Peterson

A smarter house My invention recycles food waste into energy, is eco-friendly and is solar panel powered. My invention has staircases that turn into ramps so disabled people can access every part easily. The smart house is a triangle the strongest engineering shape And is made from my invented lightning-proof glass  that absorb heat from the sun.

Inventor: Adriana, 10 years old, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Maker: Faulkner Browns Architecture

A smarter house My invention recycles food waste into energy, is eco-friendly and is solar panel powered. My invention has staircases that turn into ramps so disabled people can access every part easily. The smart house is a triangle the strongest engineering shape And is made from my invented lightning-proof glass  that absorb heat from the sun.  

Inventor: Adriana, 10 years old, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Maker: Faulkner Browns Architecture

A smarter house My invention recycles food waste into energy, is eco-friendly and is solar panel powered. My invention has staircases that turn into ramps so disabled people can access every part easily. The smart house is a triangle the strongest engineering shape And is made from my invented lightning-proof glass  that absorb heat from the sun.  

Inventor: Adriana, 10 years old, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Maker: Faulkner Browns Architecture

A smarter house My invention recycles food waste into energy, is eco-friendly and is solar panel powered. My invention has staircases that turn into ramps so disabled people can access every part easily. The smart house is a triangle the strongest engineering shape And is made from my invented lightning-proof glass  that absorb heat from the sun.

Inventor: Adriana, 10 years old, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Maker: Faulkner Browns Architecture

A smarter house My invention recycles food waste into energy, is eco-friendly and is solar panel powered. My invention has staircases that turn into ramps so disabled people can access every part easily. The smart house is a triangle the strongest engineering shape And is made from my invented lightning-proof glass  that absorb heat from the sun.  

Inventor: Adriana, 10 years old, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Maker: Faulkner Browns Architecture

And while it is true that there is no ideal age to begin, and common practice is to respect everyone’s own pace, it is also true that there seems to be a golden moment for creativity. “Between the ages of 9 and 11 there is a small period of time which represents the perfect moment: at this age, children have an ideal balance between sufficient knowledge of the world and infantile imagination”, explains the versatile designer. “I, for example, didn’t realise I was creative until the age of 19, when at school a teacher challenged us to design daily objects which had something different, something new, which rendered them more interesting. From that moment it is all I have done. In some way, Little Inventors was inspired by that moment”. Transforming the ordinary into the extraordinary, looking at what we see every day from a new point of view is what Wilcox teaches the children. One of the challenges is valorising the potential of the analogical world with children of the digital age. “It is easier to put the children in front of a screen and let them watch a video, or play. However, reality teaches us that it is hard to find great ideas like this. Personally, using my hands - drawing or building a model - helps me to think, to improve the original idea of the design. A designer never stops using their hands”.

I didn’t realise I was creative until the age of 19, when at school a teacher challenged us to design daily objects which had something different.
Little Inventors SPACE This year, Little Inventors SPACE invited children to turn their imaginations to the challenges of living in space with the help of astronaut David Saint-Jacques.

The Reading Helmet 123 Instead of holding the book you can put your book on the helmet and read. The colour will be bright pink. The material will be hard but there will be a cushion on top of the helmet so your head won't be painful.

Inventore: Julienne, Age 9, Toronto, Canada

The Reading Helmet 123 Instead of holding the book you can put your book on the helmet and read. The colour will be bright pink. The material will be hard but there will be a cushion on top of the helmet so your head won't be painful.

Inventore: Julienne, Age 9, Toronto, Canada

No Lid and Covered Straw It is a covered cup. Theres a straw on the top with a lid. When you want to take a drink you just have to push on the handle and the string attached to the lid of the straw will lift the lid so that you can drink the water without it floating around in micro gravity

Mataya, 11 years old, Beaumont, Canada

No Lid and Covered Straw It is a covered cup. Theres a straw on the top with a lid. When you want to take a drink you just have to push on the handle and the string attached to the lid of the straw will lift the lid so that you can drink the water without it floating around in micro gravity.

Mataya, 11 years old, Beaumont, Canada

The deeper sleeper machine This invention is used to help astronauts get better sleep. Since they sleep 30-60 minutes less each day since the day they left Earth, their bodies will feel tired. This invention will monitor their sleep cycle, REM sleep, and problems with their sleep. By monitoring their sleep, the deep sleep machine will use brain waves to deepen sleep to allow their bodies to energize.

Inventor: Chanpreet • Age 14, Markham, Canada

The deeper sleeper machine This invention is used to help astronauts get better sleep. Since they sleep 30-60 minutes less each day since the day they left Earth, their bodies will feel tired. This invention will monitor their sleep cycle, REM sleep, and problems with their sleep. By monitoring their sleep, the deep sleep machine will use brain waves to deepen sleep to allow their bodies to energize.

Inventor: Chanpreet • Age 14, Markham, Canada

The card table My attention and so that astronauts have fun in space. The materials to create it are only a deck of cards, Velcro. A piece of velcro on each card and lots of little tips on the table to tie them to not float.

Inventor: Sasha, Age 12, The room, Canada

In January, Wilcox was in Canada for a project in collaboration with the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) which was set up in 2017. In view of the mission involving the French-Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques, the local Little Inventors were invited to think of ways to improve his life on the International Space Station. There were 2,000 proposals, 14 of which were turned into real objects by local makers. These were added to the online platform which has already collected more than 7,000 inventions, and to the edition of a practical manual which encourages children from all over the world to become the inventors of the future. “The challenge”, explains the designer and inventor - among other things of a pair of shoes with built-in GPS and a self-driving car which takes you home while you sleep - “is to encourage the children to think creatively, but also to believe in themselves enough to be able to communicate their own ideas”.

Workshop with Dominic Wilcox
  • Little Inventors
  • 2015
  • Dominic Wilcox
  • Little Inventors, Inventions for Space! Powered by NSERC, in Collaboration with the CSA
  • NSERC/CRSNG, Canadian Space Agency (CSA)
  • Sharjah Children Biennial, 6th Edition
  • October 2018 – June 2019