By Dan Beard

Fig. 26
By duplicating the
front kite of the Broom-Straw
Flying Machine (Fig. 26), and placing it where the rear wings are, you will have
A Pyramidal Box Kite
practically speaking, almost any form of kite, airplane, or airship may be
manufactured of broom straws and paper. Fig. 27 shows
A Broom-Straw Hargrave,
or box kite, and also shows the way it may be made of strips of paper and
straws. It is possible that your box kite may be so large as to need a stronger spine (A B, Fig. 27) than that afforded
by a single straw, in which case use two or even three straws lashed together
with thread.

Fig. 27.
How to pin a paper box kite together with straws.
The straw sticks may be lengthened, when necessary, by binding the
ends of two straws together (Fig. 28);

Fig. 28.
The straws lashed together.
but if the reader wishes to build a
really beautiful little air-ship let him take
Different Colored Tissue Paper,
and using some good paste to secure the straws, placing they along near the
edges of the paper as in Fig. 29,

Fig. 29.
How to paste the paper over the straws
and after snipping a triangular piece out of the paper at the angles, as
shown at A, B, and C (Fig. 29), apply the paste to
The Flap of Paper
outside of the straw, carefully turn it over the straws as is show on the
side A C (Fig. 29), and press it down like B C is in Fig. 29.
To make a curved
edge, bend the straw to the desired curve, fasten it temporarily with a thread D E,
(Fig. 6, from Filipino Kite), place it over the paper as in the diagram and snip out the little
wedge-shaped pieces of the outside paper as shown between the H flaps (Fig.
6). Past one down at a time, as already described, and press the flap over as shown
by F and G (Fig. 6).
See Also Broom-Straw Kite Construction:
Handicraft
for Outdoor Boys