Читать книгу Little Folks' Handy Book - Adelia B. Beard - Страница 22
A NEWSPAPER BOAT WHICH WILL SAIL ON REAL WATER
ОглавлениеFig. 25—The newspaper boat made water-proof and sailing on real water.
You can fold a thirteen-and-a-half-inch square of newspaper into a fine boat measuring thirteen inches from stem to stern. It will be a good, stanch craft like Fig. 25, to float and sail out in the open on pond, lake, or river, or at home in basin or bath tub.
Fig. 26—Square of newspaper for making boat.
Fig. 27—Paper folded at centre.
Fig. 28—Paper with sides bent down, making four layers.
blah | center |
Fig. 29—Paper ready to turn back lower corners.
Fig. 30—Ready for folding back the upper corners.
Cut your square of paper even and straight. Place it out flat on top of a bare table and fold at the centre along the dotted line (Fig. 26), which will make Fig. 27. Bend each side of this down outwardly along its centre at the dotted line and bring the edges a quarter of an inch lower than the bottom fold A; then your paper will be four layers like Fig. 28. Turn up the lower edge B of Fig. 28, making Fig. 29. Fold back the three lower layers of the corners at the dotted lines (Fig. 29) and you will have Fig. 30. Bend back the upper corners at the dotted lines to make Fig. 31. Open Fig. 31 at the top and it will be your boat. Turn the boat upside down and slide one loose edge on the bottom under the other loose edge; then pinch each bottom point and bend it down toward the centre of the boat, creasing it flat (Fig. 32). Turn the boat right side up again, set it on the table, bend the two sides well up and crease them along the bottom until the boat resembles Fig. 33.