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Anonymous
It's a matter of balance. Don't make the torso, then the arms, then glue the arms to the torso, then make the head, glue the hed to the torso, then the legs, then glue the legs to the body... Make all the parts, and only when you made them all, glue them all together. That way, you can move the legs and arms around a bit to find the right balance to suit the pose of the arms, it'll easily stand on its own if you get the balance right, which really is not very hard to do if you're patient enough to not glue everything together the way you happen to put it together at the first touch. ;) The kind of homeprinters that "pull/roll" the paper through usually have no problem with thicker cardstock, the kind of printers that look more like copiers often do. Cardstock really is best for papercraft, especially at this size. With regular paper, you might get dimples everywhere.
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