 This is the open scene. This backing sheet here is slightly tacky, and the idea is that it holds your piece of card in place. I'm just going to stick that on there. I printed this piece out previously on my normal Afton printer onto some thin card, and that's ready to go into the machine. So I'll just line that up with this blue line here, and press the load button there, and then that's ready to go. The computer's ready, and I will hit send on the computer. The first thing that it does is it finds the registration marks. This bit here has got a light sensor in it. It's finding the registration marks in the corners. One down there, square up there, and there's another L shape at the top. So it's found those registration marks. And then now because this is an auto blade, it's just setting the depth. So that first blade on the left is the cutting blade. I'm just going to go around and do all the cuts first, and then when all the cuts are finished, it will reset again. It will use this blue blade here, which is set to a shallower depth, and then I'm going to go and just do... There's only a couple of score lines in this project, but I'm just going to do them now. So that's one, two, three score lines. And that's everything complete. That's the cutting doing it. It's so much easier than using scissors. So I press unload on the printer, out it pops, and that's the silhouette cutting done for the day. Let's move it back out of the way. Just sort of carefully peel them off one by one. Try not to curve them too much as you peel them off. There's the head. It's very small. This pull tab goes inside the neck for... That's the bit that does the work. There's it where. Just pull this out the way. This is the scrap. There's the bodying. This folds up into the neck. There's different sections. This piece, this little tiny piece is going to cover... See, I'm curving the actual sheet rather than the piece. It keeps that flat. That piece will cover the peg. The wire on the peg, I mean. And then this piece is going to make a tab. There's this template here. And there's a centre line there. So I've marked that. That's the centre hole there. I've transferred that onto the peg there. That gives me a place to drill. I've got a very small drill to start us off. This is a 2mm drill. So I'm just going to drill a hole. This is going to go piece of waste wood to make sure you don't drill through your workbench. This is going to drill all the way through. Try and get your drill as upright as possible. So it should be centred on the other side as possible. I'm going to change the drill bit. So this one's a 3mm drill. And this time I'm drilling just through the top layer not through the bottom one. So now I've got I've got a 3mm hole at the top 2mm hole at the bottom and that just gives a bit of space for movement. OK. So I've got a paper clip and I'm going to straighten this out first of all. OK. And then I'm just going to put a loop on the end of it to match that. It doesn't need to be exactly the same. Just as close as you can get them within reason. OK. And then the purpose of that, so I've finished with that template there's my pull wire and one of my smallest pieces from the previous cut is this one that's got a score line in the middle. That there is going to go over the top of that. So I'm going to glue, glue spreader. I'm going to put a little bit of glue on both surfaces to be sandwiched. And so some parts of it you're going to have wire on. Bit of glue there, bit of glue there. There's my wire. And then the loop just gets basically trapped inside there. Like that. Finch it shut and you can actually see the shape of the wire in the guardrail. There's that. This part's the pull tab. Right there. This is going to glue on there. Like that. And that glues onto that pull tab there. So. And then that's that part done. So the neck is made from these sections one, two, three, four, five, six sections. And these basically curve around. So what I'm going to do is before I even start assembling it is just gently curve them round on this. This is a chopstick. There's one there. So they're already curved in the right direction. I want them. And then I'm going to use this chopstick as a former while I'm assembling this. So I'm going to start at the top. Curve the first piece round. Apply it and you've got to glue up here. This is quite filling this first one because it's so small. And curve that the other side over. So match it. So that's the first section. So basically I just work my way down. Gluing each of the sections like that. It's obviously not glued to the cocktail, the chopstick. That's just there as a form. So the second one I'm going to glue. Curve it round. It gets easier as you go along because they'll get larger and larger. Although none of them are massive. Obviously because this is a dinosaur with peg. And the last one is there. So now we've got six sections all ready to go. And they'll curve like that. The neck of the dinosaur. The next step is to glue the pull tab that we made earlier inside the neck. And this basically goes right up inside and this top here glues to the inside of that very top section there. So I'll put a little dot of gray area here, a little dot of glue. Where the gray area is. Like that. Doesn't need much. And I'm going to use a little pair of pliers here just to nip this up because it is awkward to get to. I'll just try and line it up right in the middle like that. There you go. Now I'm going to pull that tab and the neck works. Good stuff. It's tiny. It's a little tiny piece. Basically you just fold it. Imagine a line near the eyes. Just give it a gentle curve like that. And then that's going to sit on the top. Like that. On the top of the neck. Now the back of the neck is the solid part. The front of the neck is the crosscut part. So obviously the head needs to line up appropriately. I'm going to trim that little tiny bit off there. So a little dot of glue on either side of the head like that. And if you can see, it's how small it is. And that just pinches on either side there. It's quite handy at this point if you just recover your chopstick from before. Put that inside. That gives you something to press up against to make sure that the glue mixes into place. It's well out of alignment. Let's try that again. So there are score marks on that one so it should fold easily. I'm going to use one hammering outside if you can hear it. And someone going past in the car. So there's the body. And then the head. And the neck. I'm going to fit inside there. So a little bit of glue on these inside tabs. That neck is going to go there. That curves around. Try and make sure that the head is still pointing towards the front. Curve that round. And a chopstick comes in handy to give you something to press up against. One side. And the other side. I'm going to try to line up these edges with the bottom of the neck tube. OK. The wire is going to come out through that hole there. What I'm going to do before we assemble it is I'm just going to scrap a sort of trough into there. Carefully. Notice that I'm scraping away from myself. So look, cut myself. And that's the wire itself. When the wire comes out, you'll see in a second but the wire is going to sit inside that trough. So wire down through the hole. The dinosaur on the top of the peg. Like that. So that's like that. And then as the peg opens and closes it will pull that down like that. So, how to do this? I need to glue the inside of the feet. I'm going to do both sides at once because I'm just going to pinch across from both. Thread that onto there. Fit the feet just slightly below the edge of the not too far below the edge of the peg. Maybe a little bit further back as well actually. Same on the other side. You can hear the black bird singing. It's obviously annoyed about something outside. And that's ready to glue up. This is the wire that pulls the head up and down. And we need to fasten that to the bottom jaw of the peg so that when you open the peg like that it moves the head and neck up and down. So the way we're going to do that is going to pick our highest point of movement and grab hold of the wire like that bend it over. So that's right. So I've now got this at right angles. And then with a pair of side cutters I've got some of that in the gap. I've got giant side cutters here. Pair of side cutters and I only need a tiny bit. Just snip that off there. Like that. And then that's going back into that trough that we made earlier on. Bit of glue. Onto the cover. Bit too much glue. And boom. And that just holds the wire into place. Make sure everything's flat underneath the peg. Allows it to stand nicely like that. And then it should just there we go. How's that? Working nicely. And here it is. It's a thing of beauty. I think you'll agree.