More than 80 years have passed since the first airplane made of paper by Jack Northrop. Probably, everyone knows how to make a paper airplane from an ordinary notebook sheet into a cage, but not everyone knows that in addition to the usual model, others, for example, a fighter, can be folded from the same sheet.
Instructions
Step 1
Take an A4 sheet of plain office paper and place it on a horizontal surface, vertically with the short side up. Fold the sheet in half in order to understand where the middle is. Then expand it. Bend the upper corners of the sheet to the middle so that they are close to each other.
Step 2
Take the two resulting side corners at the same time and connect them in the middle of the sheet. Iron all fold lines carefully.
Step 3
Now fold the uppermost and sharpest corner of the future aircraft down so that its edge is 3-4 centimeters below the edge of the sheet.
Step 4
Flip the resulting shape. The upper corners, and there should have been two of them again, bend to the middle of the sheet in the same way as in the first and second steps.
Step 5
Flip the origami over again. Now take the bottom sharp corner from the third step and fold it up as far as possible.
Step 6
Bend the almost completed airplane in half in the longitudinal direction, that is, from left to right. If you have to use force in order to perform this action, then you are holding the figure on the wrong side. Flip the airplane over and try again.
Step 7
Measure by eye about 2 to 3 centimeters from the bottom fold that formed as a result of the sixth step. Bend the "wings" to the sides at an angle of 90 degrees, that is, so that they are perpendicular to the aircraft fuselage.
Step 8
Bend the corners of the "wings" up to make "stabilizers".
Step 9
Take colored markers or pencils and draw camouflage and markings on the body of your fighter. Add body elements.