What have you folded lately?
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Thank you for the comments on the Oryx.
John, I'm really working on it, but it is alot of work, more work than I thought! Definitely in the next year I hope!
Thank you again.
Quentin
John, I'm really working on it, but it is alot of work, more work than I thought! Definitely in the next year I hope!
Thank you again.
Quentin
My flickr album: http://www.flickr.com/photos/12043525@N04/
I folded Bull:
1st attempt
this model needs lots of shaping, which i cant really accomplish in this attempt

2nd attempt


creator of this model : Stefen weber from Germany
Diagrams : Tanteidan convention book 11
http://www.flickr.com/photos/17509102@N00/
1st attempt
this model needs lots of shaping, which i cant really accomplish in this attempt

2nd attempt


creator of this model : Stefen weber from Germany
Diagrams : Tanteidan convention book 11
http://www.flickr.com/photos/17509102@N00/
nobody hates origami
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insaneorigami
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- spiritofcat
- Senior Member
- Posts: 473
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- Location: Sydney, Australia
I haven't got up to the chapter on Box Pleating in Origami Design Secrets yet, but I've been seeing a lot of great models made by that method.
The works of mikiller are especially noteworthy, and after having glanced at the CP for one of his figures, I got a vague idea of how box pleating works.
During a quiet time at work today I doodled this figure up from a piece of receipt paper. it's rough, and not even made from a square, but I'm quite pleased with the result since it is the first time I've made any attempt at box pleating.

Edit:
Tonight I have tried to fold Mikiller's Gabriel figure.

The works of mikiller are especially noteworthy, and after having glanced at the CP for one of his figures, I got a vague idea of how box pleating works.
During a quiet time at work today I doodled this figure up from a piece of receipt paper. it's rough, and not even made from a square, but I'm quite pleased with the result since it is the first time I've made any attempt at box pleating.

Edit:
Tonight I have tried to fold Mikiller's Gabriel figure.

- FlareglooM
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- stevieboy1
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Great first fold of the dung beetle zoras.
Heres my latest fold,
Mosqueto, Folded from CP, Not sure who the model is by? I think its Tsuda Yoshio? Someone please corect me if im wrong.

Kind regards
Steve
Heres my latest fold,
Mosqueto, Folded from CP, Not sure who the model is by? I think its Tsuda Yoshio? Someone please corect me if im wrong.

Kind regards
Steve
Take a look at my flicker if you wish...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/34942570@N05/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/34942570@N05/
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rockmanex6
- Senior Member
- Posts: 425
- Joined: April 27th, 2003, 1:28 am
- Location: Rock n robot!
I haven't really got time to fold much lately, but here's what I designed during the last two months. The background is going to be blue on all my pictures from now on.
Ninja :
I mostly wanted to test a hand holding a sword (for one of my upcoming model), but I also like ninjas so... He does have eyes, but they are hard to see because he is black.

Witch Apprentice :
I'm really proud of this one. My witch didn't originally have a book and a cape. She would've fitted nicely on a rectangle then but since I wanted her to be on a square, I had to add some details. The book was partly inspired by Brian Chan's Men and Manus model. The broom is a separate model from a square half the length of the one used for the witch. The real challenge here wasn't the shaping, but managing to hold the witch on the broom.

Ace of Spade :
Here's something completely different from what I usually fold. Designed for the monthly folding challenge, it comes from Alice in Wonderland and inspired by Walt Disney's version. The spear of spade is from a small rectangle of 1:3,5 proportions. I propably would've made the ace of diamonds instead if it wasn't for the black and white theme of the monthly challenge. I might do it in the future though.

More pictures on my galery.
Ninja :
I mostly wanted to test a hand holding a sword (for one of my upcoming model), but I also like ninjas so... He does have eyes, but they are hard to see because he is black.

Witch Apprentice :
I'm really proud of this one. My witch didn't originally have a book and a cape. She would've fitted nicely on a rectangle then but since I wanted her to be on a square, I had to add some details. The book was partly inspired by Brian Chan's Men and Manus model. The broom is a separate model from a square half the length of the one used for the witch. The real challenge here wasn't the shaping, but managing to hold the witch on the broom.

Ace of Spade :
Here's something completely different from what I usually fold. Designed for the monthly folding challenge, it comes from Alice in Wonderland and inspired by Walt Disney's version. The spear of spade is from a small rectangle of 1:3,5 proportions. I propably would've made the ace of diamonds instead if it wasn't for the black and white theme of the monthly challenge. I might do it in the future though.

More pictures on my galery.
Cat.
Designed by Roman Diaz.
Inspired by philbx73's recent upload.
This one was actually folded from the
leftover rectangle from a sheet of A4 paper after a square is removed as described in Origami for Interpreters. And for those of you mathematically inclined, the length of a sheet of A4 paper is equal to its width times the square root of two.

Designed by Roman Diaz.
Inspired by philbx73's recent upload.
This one was actually folded from the
leftover rectangle from a sheet of A4 paper after a square is removed as described in Origami for Interpreters. And for those of you mathematically inclined, the length of a sheet of A4 paper is equal to its width times the square root of two.






