If you’re looking to impress teachers and fellow students with your science project, working models will be the perfect accompaniment to your explanation of how agricultural cycles work. There are a wide range of things that you can create through working models, and as long as you have got some basic art equipment around the house, getting creative and imaginative is far easier than you may think.
For example, if you wanted to create a rustic stone floor for a replica farmhouse you were creating, all you would need is an uneven board of MDF, readily available from your woodwork department in school. Then, by getting PVA glue that’s been specially formulated for wood, and some trusty clay dust, you can ensure that the MDF begins to adopt that all-important stone effect. Isn’t it amazing how the most unlikely of materials can be transformed into something entirely different?
If the prospect of trying to find things like sisal rope in order to achieve realistic round bales of hay, don’t worry - websites such as www.farmmodels.net have pictures of working models of agricultural technology that can be bought direct. Of course, you may have to be prepared to pay a pretty penny for some of the tractors and muck spreaders that are available for you to purchase; as each of them are made by hand, the cost can be anywhere from 90 Euros right up to 300 Euros. That sure is a lot to pay for your science project on working models for agricultural technology!
For example, if you wanted to create a rustic stone floor for a replica farmhouse you were creating, all you would need is an uneven board of MDF, readily available from your woodwork department in school. Then, by getting PVA glue that’s been specially formulated for wood, and some trusty clay dust, you can ensure that the MDF begins to adopt that all-important stone effect. Isn’t it amazing how the most unlikely of materials can be transformed into something entirely different?
If the prospect of trying to find things like sisal rope in order to achieve realistic round bales of hay, don’t worry - websites such as www.farmmodels.net have pictures of working models of agricultural technology that can be bought direct. Of course, you may have to be prepared to pay a pretty penny for some of the tractors and muck spreaders that are available for you to purchase; as each of them are made by hand, the cost can be anywhere from 90 Euros right up to 300 Euros. That sure is a lot to pay for your science project on working models for agricultural technology!