Make a Heel Klickin' Jitterbug Out of McCormick Vertex Elements
Written By
Fabianna Dardati
Published 8 months ago
Last edited 8 months ago

Use geometry to make an adorable and fun heel klickin' friend using McCormick vertex elements! You will need:

  • Cardstock (perfectly squared or rectangular)
  • Ruler
  • Ballpoint pen
  • School glue
  • Scissors
  • Small paintbrush
Geometry is fun! Visit our RanDome fun blog for geodesics, tensegrity and more!

Step 1 Make lines

Take a sheet of card stock and using the top edge as your guide, draw parallel lines one inch apart all the way down the sheet. Press very hard so that the lines are scored.

Step 2 Cut

Count down to the sixth line and cut straight across.

Step 3 Fold

Fold along each score line to form an accordion. If you fold to the front along the first line, fold to the back on the next one. Continue folding back and forth until all the lines are folded.

Step 4 Glue first, second, and fourth sections

Mix a teeny bit of water with school glue and using a paint brush spread the glue along the first, second and fourth section of the accordion.

Step 5 Glue the rest of the sections

Glue the fourth section face on with the fifth section, the second section face on with the third and the first section face on with the sixth. Press the structure together so all the faces meet completely and smoothly. You should now have a long, Y-shaped vertex.

Step 6 Ready the vertex

Mark off a line every half inch along the length of the vertex. Cut along each line, you have in essence "sliced" the long "Y" into half-inch thick little "Y"s. These are called vertex elements. You will be using a total of 10 vertex elements to create the jitterbug. The bottom of the "Y" shape will be called the "stem" from now. The upper part will be called the "angle".

Step 7 Glue together the legs and feet

Glue the stem of one vertex element lining it up evenly into the angle of another one. Repeat the same with two other vertex elements. These are the legs and feet of the jitterbug.

Step 8 Glue the legs onto the body

Glue the upper right flap of one leg and the upper left flap of the other evenly onto the stem of a fifth vertex element. You are gluing the legs of the jitterbug onto its body.

Step 9 More Gluing

Glue the stems of two more vertex elements evenly along the insides of the upper angle of the body.

Step 10 Form the wings

Fold the right and left angle sides towards the middle so that they overlap and glue them down.  Your structure has a triangle formed at the top and four loose flaps -- two on each side of the structure. Glue the angles of two more vertex elements evenly along the insides of these flaps forming the jitterbug's two wings.

Step 11 Make the eyes

Cut two strips of cardstock one inch wide. Roll each strip from end to end into a spiral and glue them so that they will not unravel. These will be the eyes of the jitterbug. The size of the eyes depends on how tightly or loosely you roll them.

Step 12 Put it all together

Glue the two spirals together side to side. Glue the stem of the remaining vertex element so that it is flat and perpendicuar to the middle of the triangle at the top of your jitterbug's body. Now glue the two eyes on top of this as shown in the photo. Fold the feet flaps outwards so that the jitterbug appears to be clicking his heels when you gently push and pull on its wings.

Tips

  • To achieve a louder clicking sound, you may decide to glue a very small pebble or other element on the jitterbugs heels.
  • For added fun, make the eye spirals large enough for you to poke your finger in to make the jitterbug appear to be popping his eyes out.

Warning

  • Allow the glue to dry thoroughly before attempting to play with the jitterbug.

Share this article

Comments

Add your comment:
0 / 2000

How to Make a Papercraft Rolex Watch

UK-based artist Matthew Nicholson is a man of many talents: designer, photographer, professional free runner and papercraft engineer—and in the ...

Origami X-Ray Skeletons of Endangered Animals

The ancient craft of origami gets an update in Oritsunagumono, where environmentalism meets photoelectricity for the first time. Its name ...

A Brilliant Use for Moneygami (Plus, the Prowess of Won Park's Bill-Folding)

Last week, a waiter showed me something pretty neat. A habitual customer had made a tradition of leaving behind an impressive tip—not so much in ...

Little Boy Gun Freaks + 250 Meticulously Crafted Paper Weapons

After stumbling across artist Sarah Frost's legion of scrupulously folded paper guns, our interest here at WonderHowTo was instantly piqued ...

How to Fold Wet Origami

Sounds like an anomaly, right? When I was a kid folding frogs, my mother gave me origami paper that was most certainly dry. But the works below by Vietnamese-American artist Giang Dinh were ...

All Wonderment

Art of Crochet World

Teaching the World to Crochet, One Stitch at a time

Tavin's Origami World

fold your own world

Math Craft World

Mathematically Inspired Art Projects

All Featured Worlds

Mark Lorence Galano Dilan commented on How to cheat Ninja Saga for more money and levels (11/17/10), joining the discussion with 8 other people 1 hour ago

plz i need 1000 tokens and 10000 gold

Johnpaul Nacario commented on How to make a cool origami stealth fighter with Tavin, joining the discussion with 1 other person 1 hour ago

astig

Carlo Carino commented on 16 Tips for Staying Awake When You're Tired 4 hours ago

Trying this as I type.

All Community Activity
loading...