@@therealskull4786and they found numerous other Boeings with loose bolts on the door plug after the accident so it is not a one off but systematic poor quality control by Boeing.
Excellent work. I recommend that you pour white glue on the leaves and spread them out like a film with a card and let them dry in the sun. After assembly, it is more resistant and when you apply the enamel, it becomes more shiny, as if it were made of plastic, and it looks beautiful.
Beautiful job. I done a Concorde about ten years ago, very difficult as the fuselage was in one piece and difficult to roll and push the paper folds into the slots.
I’m impressed. I built plastic for years and got tired of all the filling, sanding, decals and painting. Also, this has finer details than an injection mold kit. Might try one.
I have some questions here, what type of paper do you use, and how do you get them to perfectly fit eachother? I’m doing an Air Canada 787-8 by hermercrafts and the fuselage connectors won’t reach
Hey, if I would want to make a papercraft such as the Boeing 737 Max myself. What are the supplies I need? Such as you used something to make the plane a glossy texture. The type of paper material to print the template out. I have cutting tools and I can easily make this if I take my time.