After much ado about nothing, I decided to abandon my previous attempt at MW 81 and start from scratch. This time I used a combination of standard and pastel colours (for the triangular faces). I also changed to Canford card; its expensive, but the colours are lovely and I was able to use two weights of the same colour (300gsm for the decagrams and 170gsm for the pentagrams). The decagrams need to be quite strong or they will bend. I used tabs on all but the decagrams, which had none.
After all that, I hope this link displays OK. First time I tried this.
Pete K
http://i1135.photobucket.com/albums/m62 ... 0small.jpg
Great ditrigonal dodecicosidodecahedron
- Peter Kane
- Posts: 90
- Joined: Sun Oct 25, 2009 11:50 am
- Location: S.E England
- Peter Kane
- Posts: 90
- Joined: Sun Oct 25, 2009 11:50 am
- Location: S.E England
- Peter Kane
- Posts: 90
- Joined: Sun Oct 25, 2009 11:50 am
- Location: S.E England
I used Stella nets for this one. Sometimes I use a program of my own, but mostly I use Stella now. I take the Stella printouts and transfer the polygons onto photo card: put the printout on top of the card, poke a hole though each vertex, (optionally) reposition the card and repeat, then draw lines on the photo-card with a CD pen. This gives me my tailor-made template which I then use to create the shapes using coloured card. This time I score the lines with a tool I got from a DIY store (a sharp spike). The scoring process is tedious, but I find it easier to "join the dots" than to score over a printed line (I miss too many that way).oxenholme wrote:What do you use to draw the shapes of the faces prior to cutting out?
Certainly the colours do look good - I've always felt that the card that I use looks a bit drab!
I can't vouch for the accuracy of the colours in the photo, but having compared this image with the original, it looks pretty close to me. Canford card is relatively expensive, but the colours are vibrant. The pastel triangles are made from cheepo card.
Pete K