More specifically, cephalopods!Donya wrote:Good to see that someone else has mollusks on the brain this month.
And I'm glad y'all like the grass.
Four dimensions wouldn't help-- a flat triangle is still restricted to the same angle sum.juston wrote:Whoops, I meant "isosceles right triangle" not "equilateral right triangle"... that would have to be some crazy, four dimensional paper. I wonder what you could fold with it?
That is an interesting idea-I never thought about using non-flat triangles. Goran Konjevod did something similar-check out this and this.ahudson wrote:However, paper with spherical curvature could make an equilateral right triangle... it's hard to find/make that sort of paper though the best thing I've found is onion skins, but they're small and brittle so I haven't explored the concept much.
My quest for the equilateral right triangle is complete!
Whitefly wrote:TIME OUT!!
Hey Chephalarbiter who is the winner??
We all are waiting for october challenge!!
Sbrigati ops.... hurry up!
Mario