Do you fold Tessellations?
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Do you fold Tessellations?
Hey guys, I fold tessellations a lot, but I was wondering... how many other people fold them as well? A lot of the topics here are about representational models, but I know a lot of people like geometric origami too!
Do you like folding tessellations?
Do you like folding tessellations?
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Tesselations have always seemed to be super-complex to me- the Ryujin is part tesselation!!! I always see those cool tesselations by Chris Palmer and Eric Gjerde and I feel its so hard.I messed around with simple tessellations and geometric stuff in high school a lot, but I have tended much more toward representational origami in recent years.
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I've folded a few tessellations (rose tessellation and spread squashed hexagonal twists), but my problem is not that I don't like them. It's that I don't fully understand the process of making them. And---for good reason--- there are few diagrams for many tessellations. I wish I could find a few more explanations online of the process of making them.
Whenever I do complex Origami I get this sinking feeling.
Ive never tried tesselations, except for ryujin scales and turte shell plates. Ive never had any desire to try them either, probably because I like my models to look like something recognizable. However, i do like looking at some of them.
Flickr account:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/origamizoraz/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/origamizoraz/
Actually Sunburst, most tessellations can be folded quite well from printer paper. I still use printer paper for everything except exhibition pieces, when I'm folding tessellations. Tessellations are much more permissive than representational work in this respect-- really almost any paper will work for tessellations.Sunburst wrote:I never really tried to fold any tesselations because I the paper I have is definitely not suited for tesselations. The closest thing I have folded to a real tesselations is probably Lang's Western pond turtle (with the scales of the shell.) I'm sure they must be fun to fold, though.
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