Kid-Friendly Bugs Bunny Carrot Shooter

by WaameneB in Craft > Cardboard

271 Views, 2 Favorites, 0 Comments

Kid-Friendly Bugs Bunny Carrot Shooter

IMG_1431.jpeg

Hey guys,

I'm Waamene, A 13 year old girl from Premier Charter Middle School. I recently decided to start doing some kid friendly projects because I noticed that most things included guns and violence equipment which is not the best influence to young kiddos, so I decided to go with a more steady option with a beloved character, Bugs Bunny! I had lots of fun making this and testing it out with my little brothers. So without further to do, let’s get started!


After many trial and errors, fails and attempts, I finally have found an easy way to make a shooter. Sometimes you have to focus on how you do things because I was focusing more on the visual representations and ended up with lots of scraps. so remember to "work smarter, not harder."

Supplies

IMG_1363.jpeg
IMG_1425.jpeg
Untitled9_20240630124804.jpeg
Untitled9_20240630124339.jpeg

-1 roll of clear Duct Tape

-Two orange pencils

-One black marker

-A foam hair curler

-A Crayon

-One thick rubber band

-A hot glue gun

-A 12 inch x 12 inch piece cardboard

-1 printed out Bugs Bunny head facing left

-1 printed out Bugs Bunny head facing right

-Super glue

-An 8-inch skewer

-A ruler

-A 1.5 inch x .5 cm piece of flat wood (which can be obtained from a broken wood ruler)

-Orange thread

-Green thread

Shooter Holder

IMG_1365.jpeg

Cut out a 12 cm x 7 cm rectangle from the 12:12 inch cardboard piece. Outline a handle with a straight long snout. Design as you choose just make sure the snout is straight. Then cut it out and put it to the side. Note: Make sure to plug in your hot glue gun so it can heat up before you begin glueing!

Making Hollow Cylinders

IMG_1366.jpeg
IMG_1367.jpeg
IMG_1368.jpeg

From the large piece of cardboard (the starting 12 inch x 12 inch one) cut out two 12 cm x 5 rectangles. Make sure you cut it diagonally so the lines are across the cardboard like the one above. Crease the lines so it becomes bendy. Now roll these cardboard strips into two equal cylinders and hot glue them or/and tape the together.

Connecting Shooter Pieces

IMG_1369.jpeg

After glueing/taping the cylinders together, glue them the snout of your shooter handle!

Making Wood Flinger (1)

IMG_1376.jpeg
IMG_1380.jpeg

Next, get your 1.5 inch x 0.5 cm piece of wood ( I got mine from a broken wood ruler,) and drill a hole right through the center. You can do this by rotating your scissors multiple times until it goes right through the wood. Cut around a 3 cm from the top of you skewer. Then put it through the hole you made and hot glue it so it stays secure.

Making Wood Flinger (2)

IMG_1381.jpeg
IMG_1397.jpeg

With the remaining skewer, cut it directly in half and hot glue each half skewer 1 cm away from the hole in the middle wood! Then super glue two small circles of cardboard to the top of the two half skewers. There might be a lot of measuring so just hang in there with me!

Attaching Flinger to Shooter

IMG_1391.jpeg

Now, insert the wood flinger piece into the two holes in the shooter and use your rubber band to loop over the skewer then to the end of the snout, as shown in the picture.

Carrot Projectiles

IMG_1399.jpeg
IMG_1398.jpeg

Next, cut off the top and bottom of one of your orange pencils and cut two 5 cm segments of the bottomless and topless pencil. Shave down the bottom of the two pencil pieces to make it more narrow and pointy. After this, wrap the orange thread around the narrow bottoms and super glue the thread to keep it from unraveling. Get the green thread and cut multiple pieces of it and super glue it to the top of the pencil pieces so it appears as a carrot, as shown above.

Bugs Bunny Design

Untitled9_20240630124804.jpeg
Untitled9_20240630124339.jpeg
IMG_1408.jpeg

Next print out the two bugs bunny photos below or above that show bugs bunny facing left and right. After printed, cut out both photos and tape them on either sides of the shooter. Make sure the pictures are aligned if not trim the photos so it can or retake them and make sure that the mouth is at the end of the shooter barrels.

Finishing Touches (optional)

IMG_1430.jpeg

With the scraps of the Bugs Bunny head cutout, make a cover for the handle, glue it with super glue, color it in with pencil, and outline it using your black marker. Then cut the foam hair curler, vertically cut it across the middle, and then cut the length to around an inch. Glue the inch length hair curler piece to the end of the skewer flinger like in the photo above.

Test and FINISH

IMG_1438.gif

Now there you got it, a kid-friendly, Bugs Bunny carrot projector. Look at it go. Even in slow-mo it keeps its speed. I really enjoyed making this project. I hope I can share it with you guys too and save up for a 3D-printer so I can print a better and more cleaner version of this little shooter. Feel free to add your own little designs and alterations to it and feel free to ask me about questions on this!