Seattle-based designer Taras Lesko has spent the last few months building a nearly-life-size replica of the Lamborghini Aventador exclusively out of printing paper and cardboard.
We first featured Taras Lesko’s paper masterpieces back in 2010, shortly after he had completed his amazing
4-foot-tall Freedom Gundam. In 2011 he surprised us all again with an even more impressive 7-foot Gundam made with 1,250 distinct paper parts cut out of 720 pages.
Taras took a two-year-long break after
that, but he has recently unveiled his latest work of art, a stunning paper-and-cardboard replica of the Lamborghini Aventador sports car. Using his design skills, the Seattle-based artist created all the necessary parts in computer programs like Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator and AfterEffects, printed them on hundreds of sheets of paper and used a precise X-Acto knife to cut them loose.
To make sure his paper Aventador was sturdy enough to move around, Lesko used thick chipboard as a frame for the ultra-light vehicle which weighs just 11.3 kilograms.
Named the Lamborghini Aventador A-E2 (after the architectural E2 paper sheets he used for printing), Taras Lesko’s creation measure 244 x 115 x 63cm and is currently mounted on a wall in his house. Just to get an idea of how incredibly complex the building process was, check out some of the printed parts before assembly.