How To Make Cardboard Cutouts: Software & Ebook

How To Make Cardboard Cutouts Software & Tutorials Online

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This is Real life Cardboard Cutout is made with the help of "Almost Breathing Software & Ebook"

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Question by : Average and Giant Bear Cutout?
I’m gonna to make a average sized bear representation out of cardboard, and the largest bear record as well. Does anyone have any idea how to get the height an weight into dimensions using feet and inches? :D

Best answer:

Answer by thedriftindragon
you can google for the size of the largest bear on record – or estimated size of prehistoric bears. As Grizzlies can stand 10′ tall, i suggest you make your size 1-3″ per foot depending on how large you want your cutout to be – for example a 10′ grizzly would be 10-30″ tall on that scale

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Artist Matthew Robins installs his new piece, The Roboinsects, at London Zoo as part of Pestival @ ZSL London Zoo. The Roboinsects combines a few of Matthew’s favourite things . . . robots, science-fiction, insects, space-rockets, foxes and cardboard . . . all in one place. Matthew Robins has always liked to make things from cardboard and imagines what happens when other worlds collide, like here where the Robots have left their home planet but have got lost and ended up on another planet filled with roboinsects. You can make a cardboard roboinsect too – download it from www.sadlucy.com. print it out, colour it in, glue it together.
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One Response to “How To Make Cardboard Cutouts: Software & Ebook”

  1. nurnord Says:

    Ok, as you did not reply to my questions I sent you, I will answer with my own interpretation…

    An ‘average sized bear’ is about 6 ft tall and 300 lbs in weight, standing on all fours it would be about 3 ft tall at the shoulder and about 5 ft long.

    To convert these measurements into a model size, convert ft to inches (12 inches is 1 foot) then simply divide the inches by the same number (for height on all four’s/standing upright height and length). For example the above measurements of 6, 3 and 5 ft are 72, 36 and 60 inches. Dividing each by 3 gives 24, 12 and 20 inches – the correct ratio for your model.

    ‘Thedrift’ mentions a height of 10 ft for the grizzly, this is both at the limit for a grizzly and too small going by the heights other bears attain. Kamchatka Brown Bears, Kodiaks and the tallest bears of all – the Polar Bear all exceed 10 ft in height in some cases. There is a widely stated height for a record Kodiak at 14 ft tall, this however is completely ridiculous and exaggerated. The tallest confirmed record bear is a 12 ft Polar Bear, so base your model on that….

    A 12 ft tall Polar Bear would have these measurements – 12, 5 and 10 ft again in inches – 144, 60, 120.

    Converted to a manageable scale (divided by 3 as before) – 48, 15 and 40 inches.