Well dont worry, I have been working on the Magician, just not where a photo means much. Like sanding. Fuselage is all sanded. The ribs have been all sliced along with the half ribs. One of the convenient things with an ibeam is that the ribs are all created from the center rib template. The template is made from something hard. Some folks use aluminum. This had the advantage that when you are slicing the ribs with your preferred weapon (razor blade, scalpel, meat cleaver) the blade doesnt cut into the template. I dont do much metal work so i used 1/8 inch ply and hardened the edge with thin CA. Then I darkened the edge with a black marker so it had contrast visually with the balsa sheet i was slicing the ribs from. Ribs are sliced from 1/8 inch balsa sheet and are 1/4 inch thick. Measure the length of the template rib from the back of the leading edge which is 1/4 inch balsa to the front of the trailing edge which is sized to fit the front of the flaps thickness. Section it that length then tic mark each edge at 1/4 inch intervals. Set the rib template on the two marks front and back, hold it, and slice, preferably leaving your finger tip attached. Rib! Well half a rib cause you are going to have a top half and a bottom half, so you need twice as many as number of ribs the design calls for. Half ribs are also sliced the same way to be placed midway between the full length ribs. They go just past the wing main spar.
Some people use variouis forms of jigs to position the template to the sheet to slice the ribs. I am more of a connect the dots kind of guy. Always liked connect the dots puzzles as a kid too, and mazes!
The tip rib jig has been made too. It basically holds the tip aligned with the the center rib and holds the leading edge, main spar, and trailing edge in fixed position. The location, alignment, and incidence are all set with the two wing tip jigs and the fuselage openings that the leading edge, spar, and trailing edge pass thru. The fuselage top which is flat and aligned with the wing center line and tops of the tip jigs are all in alignment and flat to each other. Pics to follow.