wigupapercraft.pdf

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Microsoft Word - wigu final papercraft.doc
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Print page 1, the one with the parts on it (save ink… don’t print the
instructions!) Print on thick paper , like 67 lb. or 110 lb. cardstock .
For the best folds, score each folding edge with a knife or round-ended scoring
tool… if you have one of those. I don’t know why you would; I don’t have one!
Maybe you are an heir to a real printing shop, I dunno.
Hair Assembly -
First, cut out the white area with the ears in it.
Then, score the underside of the hair top where it edges with the hair back
(the large brown area).
Fold the hair in half at the grey line and glue the hair together.
Cut through the glued hair part around the difficult hair-shaped curves
Body Assembly -
Score and cut out body part
Glue together tab 1 and the side of Wigu’s body, then glue all tab 2’s
Cut out the pants bottoms and remember to reverse score at the dotted grey
line, then glue the pants bottoms to the tab 3’s
Ears - These go together like the hair. Score the grey line, cut out the white
boxes, fold, glue and then cut out the ears
Arms – Tiny and hard to handle, but you can do it! “Tacky Glue” is your friend
here. Glue the side tab together first, then do each end separately.
Shoes – Almost as tricky as the arms, but tacky glue makes it not so tricky.
You’ll be glueing three tabs at once – make sure you don’t crush the shoe with
excessive rage forces.
Finally – Glue everything together. Ears, hair, shoes and arms. You can glue the
arms on anywhere, to make your own arm expressions. This is your chance to
show the world what you can do with arm-posing! Go get ‘em!
WIGU is Copyright ∞ by Jeffrey Rowland. Paper model design by Josh Buczynski – 2005
Visit www.wigu.com for answers to your confusion.
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