ok, so I finished the model... and you guys are good.. it was an ant!
I am very dissatisfied with the head. The head portion looks pretty big! Does it look normal to you guys?
Lpatch wrote:The head portion looks pretty big! Does it look normal to you guys?
It looks like the proportions intended by the diagrams.
Having just looked at some real pictures of "average" ants, the head is a surprisingly large (to me, at least) section of the overall anatomy.
In order to even things out, I normally tuck a greater proportion of the abdomen in, and at a more acute angle than you have, when rounding it out. So that each of the three body segments is approximately equal in length.
In the Book, some of Dr. Lang's pictures of his ants have quite short, fat & very rounded abdomens.
Yours looks good as it is though.
That is a sweet ant... but I cant really see what its abdomen looks like.
Anyways, I'm working on my next model.... so far so good! anyone want to take a guess at what it is?? *hint* I've been sweating like crazy over these dang unsinks!!! [img]http://img9.imageshack.us/img9/5700/imag0489g.jpg[/img]
I FAILED... I was doing so good with these complex models too! But this scorpion made me feel like I was dumb... Anyone else have big troubles with the Lang scorpion first try??
that scorpion is one of my favorite models. I really like folding it but remember it beeing hard at the first try.
again the decision of the paper makes the difference
[img]http://falten.cwsurf.de/bilder/104.jpg[/img]
Lpatch: that's not a bad effort at all, with that paper you can make the legsmore effective by using a small headed screwdriver, fold the paper around the blade, squeeze hard, hold, and it will keep the shape much better.
I manage to significantly improve the thinning on legs and other points, when dry folding like that.
TheRealChris's scorpion looks just about ready to strike!
The thing I find with the scorpion from "Origami Insects and their Kin" is the inconsistent leg lengths, which, when you fold it in ordinary paper, makes it difficult to get all the feet on the ground at the same time.
Foil or adhesive will hold it in place, but for me that is unsatisfactory.
I assume, without proof, that this is what sparked the second iteration and Dr. Lang's invention of the phrase "varileg". (He did kindly explain this in a topic on this forum somewhere...)
The model is great to fold, one of the most enjoyable sequences in the book, along with, co-incdentally, the ant. (Least favourite: Black Pine Sawyer. Aargh!)