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It takes hundreds of people 50 days to build a real Boeing 777 plane, but one student has produced an astonishing miniature paper Boeing 777 model. The model contains tiny details, from airplane seats to wings like real airplanes, and even retractable undercarriage ...
Luca Stewart made the plane model with only cardboard and glue, and the surprise was the author's depiction of the details of the plane. From the seat of the airplane chair to the engine blades and even the landing gear of the aircraft, are presented in front of people.
The 22-Year-old has been making a model plane for more than five years, and if he doesn't stop for a year, the model may have been completed. We see from the picture that the aircraft model is almost complete. It was a hellish experience, he says.
Luca Stewart in high School for the first time he met a plane paper film, the love of aircraft prompted him to carry out this huge project. He added that the architecture department, which was fortunate enough to go to high school, was a source of great inspiration.
The student used photographs and drawings to design his plane model. It all started with the Indian Airlines Boeing 777 detail map that he found.
Mr. Stewart said it was difficult to describe how the planes were grouped together, but it was certain that before building the internal facilities he had made the fuselage (the main part of the aircraft). After learning the simple cardboard model, he wanted to make the technology the best he could, so he decided to build the model. And aviation has been his interest for years, and this project combines his love of airplanes and art and design. After finding the Indian airline's online Boeing 777 detail, he began to design his own model with pencils and paper.
He explained that he had painted a perfect round fuselage, but it quickly hit the wall because the design was impractical and eventually had to use the computer. These days he has been looking at photographs or engineering drawings and using them to design his own model on a 2D plane. He also said that at first he used Adobe Illustrator to print the pictures onto cardboard and then cut the parts to assemble them.
After the fuselage is finished, the Iaconi-stewart is fitted with a vertical wing and a horizontal stabilizer for the fuselage, as well as an increase in body painting. The engine was made halfway through the project, and he said that when he was bored he would change to make different components.
He explained that he had actually made two planes, but many of the early attempts had been discarded. But the attempt honed his skills and made him open curtains and details that looked exactly like the plane's kitchen.
Because his design is not done in 3D space, many designs are difficult to implement, especially irregular shaped parts such as engines and wings. He said it was challenging to assemble these parts and he recently discovered how to bend the cardboard in three-dimensional space. Other parts of the challenge are relatively low because they are simply assembled. While there is plenty of economic space to make, it is fortunate that he can do the work while watching movies or television, but assembling them together is still a difficult process.
It's hard to believe that the complicated open cabin door on the left is made of cardboard and glue. Stewart now uses computers and prints to get accurate and small parts of the aircraft.
Cardboard makes Boeing 777 aircraft model