I have construction paper, signature paper, and print paper. I haven't got any tissue or foil or any other kind yet. Does anyone have any suggestions or diagrams for the paper. Like wet folding or just keeping it simple for the construction paper or the signature paper. I do most of my folding w/ print paper to learn the folds, Just an Intermediate trying to get better to complex. Would Love any advice TY!
The general rule is: the thinner the paper, the more complex (more layers on top of each other) you can make with it. You might want try bakingpaper. The stuff you put in the oven. It does not fold great, but it is cheap and very thin. Takes some getting used too because it kind of slides. Good for practise. Still tissue foil or double tissue is the best option. But it costs a bit more and you have too make it yourself.
roodborst wrote:Not sure about waxpaper. You buy it in a box of sheets or a roll. Thin white or brown, almost translucent. It is kind of slippery when you fold it.
The "baking paper" that others have referred to is generally called parchment paper in the US. It is not wax paper, but rather paper that is used to line a baking pan when you are baking something in the oven. It is available in any supermarket. It works pretty well for folding, but is hard to finish. Models that require a lot of shaping once they are folded are generally do not turn out that great in my opinion.
construction paper Would be over 130 gsm but generally sourced From areas where they removed alot OF Trees To build offices Or homes...it IS only suitable therefoe for models like ciphers,letters And numbers,,simple kusudamas Or sonobe,,cubes,,3d modulars ,,paper planes And simple folds.. origami.clothes And shoes you can cut To The size OF money dollars Or euros And build models That way
Yes, I have tried kraft paper and I like it very much.
I also recomend tracing paper, because it's cheap and thin.
I too use printer paper for rough drafts and stuff, and I have found that it wet folds very poorly, and is often too small, but otherwise works just fine.
I've only used construction paper once for a model of Baby Groot with a woody texture. I noticed that the paper can barely keep the shape of limbs or desired crinkles, but wet folding is very effective. However, it takes a long time to dry and I don't think I'll ever use it again.
But yeah, good luck!