DIY - πΉ How to make an ARROW from A4 paper with your own hands. DIY paper weapons Origami weapons
Hey! In this video I will show how to make a paper arrow out of A4 paper myself. Watch, repeat, subscribe and like! Enjoy watching!
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Thank you for watching my DIY video))) It will be just great if you write in the comments to this video whether you managed to make a paper arrow, or maybe you have any wishes or suggestions for future crafts.
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Reference:
Arrows - a throwing projectile for archery and crossbow shooting. As a rule, an arrow is a thin rod, on one side of which there is a sharp tip, and on the other, narrow blades (plumage).
More often, even branches and shoots were taken for arrows, or they were pulled out of a chopped solid tree. Reed was also used. For accurate shooting, it was required to monitor their straightness and correct it by bending, usually by heating over a fire.
The best arrows were glued. Their shaft was glued together from four slats with fish glue, such arrows were called βred-hotβ from the Turkic qalΓ―n, Kazakh kalyn βfrom the wordβ thick ββ numerous, consisting of a large number. βDuring storage, they did not deform for decades.
Bamboo arrows were also of good quality. But only every hundredth sprout turned out to be suitable.
The purpose of the arrow is usually determined by the type of arrowhead. In Russia, arrows were called by the tip: severga, shear, tamarka, etc.
Preferred, both from the point of view of hitting accuracy and from the point of view of penetrating power, was the faceted shape of the tip, in the form of a narrow pyramid. The Scythians were the first to cast faceted bronze tips.
Leaf-shaped, and especially triangular with burrs, the arrowheads, however, did not give up their positions throughout the entire era of using the bow, since they inflicted a much heavier wound and were poorly removed from it.
Finally, "shears" were used quite often - arrows with a flat, chisel-like tip. Theoretically, their penetrating power was worse than that of arrows with a faceted tip, but in practice such a tip had anti-ricochet properties. The penetration force of the shear fell significantly less when deviating from the normal when hit.
Modern sport arrowhead
Even during the Middle Ages, arrows were a commodity of mass production, for they were consumed in huge quantities, and most often they were not reused - although after the battle, and sometimes even during it, they tried to collect whole arrows. Therefore, rather cheap materials were used for the manufacture of tips, processed without special care. In the Stone and Bronze Age, a retouched flake of a flint blade served as the material for making an arrowhead, with rare exceptions. Bone arrowheads are much less common. Bone tips in the shape of a pear with an extended warhead were used for hunting birds and fur-bearing animals. In Western Europe, bone arrowheads ceased to be used only in the 13th century. In Russia, stone arrowheads are found until the end of the 9th century, surviving much later, but not as a utilitarian, but as a votive ritual object.
During the transition to the iron industry, arrowheads remained mass-produced and of poor quality.
Despite this, the arrow, suitable for long-range and accurate shooting, was a rather high-tech product, its production required little material (relatively little - it took up to 45 g of iron on the tip of a heavy arrow), but a lot of work. Manual labor was widely used in the Middle Ages, but the archer could not make a high-quality arrow on a campaign on his own.
In addition to the usual ones, incendiary arrows were also used - with a bundle of burning tow. Such arrows from good bows flew about 100 meters, that is, at a distance one and a half to two times less than that of ordinary ones, since the tow greatly increased the drag.
For reasons of minimizing drag, heavy arrows, which did not require great accuracy, were often made unfeathered.
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