What is the average age of people on this site
Forum rules
READ: The Origami Forum Rules & Regulations
READ: The Origami Forum Rules & Regulations
i know its way past thread date buut
im not quite yet an avid member...but i´m 25
"The most profound statements are the ones that never get said"
http://www.flickr.com/photos/16154798@N00/
http://www.reverbnation/friendblanket
http://www.myspace.com/stromnagrom
http://www.flickr.com/photos/16154798@N00/
http://www.reverbnation/friendblanket
http://www.myspace.com/stromnagrom
- origamimasterjared
- Buddha
- Posts: 1670
- Joined: August 13th, 2004, 6:25 pm
- Contact:
- Brimstone
- Buddha
- Posts: 1729
- Joined: November 23rd, 2004, 3:59 am
- Location: Colombia, South America
- Contact:
I think it is not strictly necessary but it helps a lot. I speak from personal experience. The friend that re-introduced me to origami is an excellent folder but he only folded from books. He learned 3 or 4 models from his father and from then on he bought 4 or 5 origami books and he folded all of the models from those books. He makes precise folds and gives nice "expression" touches to models (a lot better than I can), but he was not aware of nice models such as the Kawasaki rose and he had never heard of the origami masters Hojyo, Kamiya, Miyajima and Komatsu, he didn't even know that foil paper existed. I introduced him to these people, to the foil paper and to some ultra complex models that he has tried and accomplished very nicely, so in some way, finding me widened his origami world.TheRealChris wrote:is it really that important to have physical contact to other folders?
Regarding myself I started to attend my local group meetings and from meeting people there I was introduced to nice models, nice papers and I improved my folding technique. There are many ways of folding and not always your way is the right way.
When I teach origami, I encourage my "pupils" to check on their neighbor's technique and compare it to what they do. Sometimes they get nice surprises
this is so true man, i am a self taught too...but not really becuase the internet helped immensly with diagrams forums and other pages with images etc, but when my girlfriend was learning, she showed me by accident some alternate ways to fold the preliminary base, and like my roomate showed me how to apply origami to other things than just square paper ie: napkins, notes, and mainly ...well...at the time..uhm cigarettes *cough*.....and he made these magnificant tubes and cones....very amazing! i think it is important to not only be in contact with other folders...but also to become a pupil whenever you can be.When I teach origami, I encourage my "pupils" to check on their neighbor's technique and compare it to what they do. Sometimes they get nice surprises
Morgan
"The most profound statements are the ones that never get said"
http://www.flickr.com/photos/16154798@N00/
http://www.reverbnation/friendblanket
http://www.myspace.com/stromnagrom
http://www.flickr.com/photos/16154798@N00/
http://www.reverbnation/friendblanket
http://www.myspace.com/stromnagrom
I thought people who post here were older ! Maybe because many of the origami masters besides Kamiya are kind in their fourties or older.
I can´t remember the age I was when I started folding. I must have been around 7 years old when my mother taught me the crane, but I´ve only got more serious about origami this year.
BTW, I am 23, I´ll be 24 on a few weeks,and I am a Computer engineer.
I can´t remember the age I was when I started folding. I must have been around 7 years old when my mother taught me the crane, but I´ve only got more serious about origami this year.
BTW, I am 23, I´ll be 24 on a few weeks,and I am a Computer engineer.
-
- Moderator
- Posts: 1874
- Joined: May 17th, 2003, 1:01 pm
- Location: Germany
-
- Junior Member
- Posts: 62
- Joined: April 14th, 2005, 2:30 am
- Location: United States, Missouri
Wow, Underaverage!
23, student.
I've been folding for as long as I remember (but since I can't place my first folding memory, that doesn't mean much). It all started with a battered old origami book. . .
I just discovered this forum today, through a link about bernie payton's owls (are there diagramns? Please?). Just when I was starting to get to work on my paper. . . .
I agree that having physical contact with other folders is very important. I was self taught until about a year ago. I was getting kind of bored, didn't have any interesting models to fold. Then I joined my local origami group and I feel so refreshed! It's definately worth joining a club if you can!
-Calfaile
I've been folding for as long as I remember (but since I can't place my first folding memory, that doesn't mean much). It all started with a battered old origami book. . .
I just discovered this forum today, through a link about bernie payton's owls (are there diagramns? Please?). Just when I was starting to get to work on my paper. . . .
I agree that having physical contact with other folders is very important. I was self taught until about a year ago. I was getting kind of bored, didn't have any interesting models to fold. Then I joined my local origami group and I feel so refreshed! It's definately worth joining a club if you can!
-Calfaile
But I do!
. . .after all I taught that great lizard a few meetings ago. . .
I'll teach the frog next time, since I hear that conscripted teaching has been implemented.
But since we're pulling local errata into this forum, I must say that one of the *major* reasons why I like the origami group so much is that I can learn at the feet of Master Wu. You can't get great undiagrammed models just *anywhere* you know. . .
Are the other great masters as generous as you?
The other reason is the hi jinks, definately the hi jinks. Whoever said that origami people were a quiet and withdrawn bunch obviously goes to the wrong meetings. . .
I'll teach the frog next time, since I hear that conscripted teaching has been implemented.
But since we're pulling local errata into this forum, I must say that one of the *major* reasons why I like the origami group so much is that I can learn at the feet of Master Wu. You can't get great undiagrammed models just *anywhere* you know. . .
Are the other great masters as generous as you?
The other reason is the hi jinks, definately the hi jinks. Whoever said that origami people were a quiet and withdrawn bunch obviously goes to the wrong meetings. . .
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 443
- Joined: April 18th, 2005, 7:27 pm
- Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
- Contact:
Re: But I do!
Okay...teach more then.Calfaile wrote:. . .after all I taught that great lizard a few meetings ago. . .
No. Most of them are much more generous than I am.Calfaile wrote:Are the other great masters as generous as you?
It's all Jamie's fault.Calfaile wrote:The other reason is the hi jinks, definately the hi jinks. Whoever said that origami people were a quiet and withdrawn bunch obviously goes to the wrong meetings. . .
-
- Newbie
- Posts: 14
- Joined: September 8th, 2005, 9:55 am
- Location: Among the southern folk, between the sunken city and the house in the clouds
Blast. Why is it whenever someone has a birthday on a forum I visit I'm always flamin' last to notice!
For what it's worth, I hope you had a good one.
I'm 32 and I find that deeply scary. I certainly don't feel it.
Been folding since I found an old Rupert annual lying around the house with a crane in it when I was about 7. I tried to fold it, failed, gave it to Dad who made it perfectly, took it apart to find out how and lost my temper when in wouldn't go back together. A few years later I found 'Origami: The Art of Papaer Folding' by Robert Harbin on my parents bookshelf. No idea why as neither of them can even make a paper dart, but I borrowed it and guess what the first model I leaned to fold was...
For what it's worth, I hope you had a good one.
I'm 32 and I find that deeply scary. I certainly don't feel it.
Been folding since I found an old Rupert annual lying around the house with a crane in it when I was about 7. I tried to fold it, failed, gave it to Dad who made it perfectly, took it apart to find out how and lost my temper when in wouldn't go back together. A few years later I found 'Origami: The Art of Papaer Folding' by Robert Harbin on my parents bookshelf. No idea why as neither of them can even make a paper dart, but I borrowed it and guess what the first model I leaned to fold was...