This thesis investigates a novel input technique for enriching the gesture vocabulary on a multi-touch surface based on fingers' relative location and passive tokens. The first project, TouchTokens, presents a novel technique for interacting with multi-touch surfaces and tokens. The originality is that these tokens are totally passive (no need for any additional electronic components) and their design features notches that guide users' grasp. The purpose of the notches is to indicate a finger spatial configuration (touch pattern) that is specific to the token. When users hold a token and place it on the surface, touching them simultaneously, the system can recognize the resulting touch patterns with a very high level of accuracy (>95%). Thi...