Satoshi Kamiya - Ancient Dragon

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insaneorigami
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Post by insaneorigami »

bethnor wrote:also that it's not easy to get a piece of tissue-foil that is compeltely wrinkle free in the first place.
It is quite easy :D. You just have to smooth the paper out :D. The crumpling of the paper can be remedied by stopping after every few steps, and smoothing the paper :D. Also, different people like different papers; I am one of the people who likes tissue foil. I have a friend who can't stand to even touch the stuff, and another who loves it to death :D.
insaneorigami
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Post by insaneorigami »

Some pictures of my latest Ancient Dragon:
ImageImage

Sorry for the bad quality...
dude22
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Post by dude22 »

nice dragon :D ...
ok im embarassed to say this but i need some help in steps 79-82 :oops:
PLEASE help ....
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Ragnorax
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Post by Ragnorax »

dude22 wrote:nice dragon :D ...
ok im embarassed to say this but i need some help in steps 79-82 :oops:
PLEASE help ....
Well you just need to open sink that along the fold indicated and then fold it over and squash it flat.. Its a fairly simple step. I dont know how else to explain it.

If you dont know how to make an open sink, check at the beginning of the book and it should have pictures showing an example of an open sink.
dude22
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Post by dude22 »

i think i got it .. this is it right ?? i know its messy,
Image
Adam
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Post by Adam »

Looks pretty much okay, dude22
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chesslo
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Post by chesslo »

Same, looks like you nailed it. :wink:
Aleburzyn
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Post by Aleburzyn »

Hi all, I've browsed the entire thread and haven't found good answers to these questions:

step 73: do you open the front layers in the open sink?

http://img691.imageshack.us/img691/8442/12226000.jpg

step 75/86: let's suppose you do both sinks (front and back) at the same time, the polygon you'll be sinking will (in general) look like one of these two? which one?

http://img689.imageshack.us/img689/8108/sink.jpg

Thanks
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Didée
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Post by Didée »

step 73: yes, open all layers. The sink is "fully open". If you keep the front layers closed, it would be a closed sink.

step 75/86: like the 2nd shape you painted.

Exercise for 75/86:
- make birdbase
- open-sink the top triangle by (half height)
- crease the half-angle at the left & right corner
- now practice those sinks on that flap(s)

(edit) Like so:
Image
Aleburzyn
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Post by Aleburzyn »

Thanks for the quick answer!!!
By the way, for the record, step 103 sinks are the same.
bethnor
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Post by bethnor »

while that idea to practice 75/86 is sound, the actual problem with those steps is that there is no way to open up the actual model the way you can with just a bird base. that's what makes those steps difficult, not the actual sinks.
Aleburzyn
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Post by Aleburzyn »

I don't understand what to do in step 180 with the "sink and squash", for the moment I have skipped that detail and it seems it isn't necessary, is it?
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Didée
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Post by Didée »

The sink/squash is necessary to put the head section "above" the leg section, i.e. to make it stand out "longer". When not done at all, then the head flap will be the same length as the leg flaps.

When you just pull the head flap while closing the structure, you have a 1:1:1 chance that ...

1) the squash will form naturally
2) something ~similar~ will form naturally
3) the paper will rrrr...ipppppp....


In case of doubt, you might try the following easy exercise. The flap arrangement is quite different to that of step#180, but the squash-move is basically the same. (Imagine the head-flap would be attached to the inner flap of this easy sequence.)

Image

Just to give an idea of what's basically going on.
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Ragnorax
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Post by Ragnorax »

I finished folding this model again, heres the result:

Image
Image

I still would like to better shape the model, but im ok with how it is.
lancealmekian
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Post by lancealmekian »

For shaping, I suggest you look Shuki Kato's profile over at flickr.com, he has an Ancient Dragon folded using tracing paper, and it looks uber awesome (that's where I got my inspiration to shape).

My version:

Image

Side by side with a Bahamut 2.0
Image

Both were folded using 80 sq cm Kraft Paper (tailors here use it for making dress patterns). It's strong and really thin, which allows for more detailed folds. For people who have trouble shaping the horns, I advice you use paper glue to shape it with, then blowdry it so it gets solid.

On a side note, whenever I ask people what they prefer between these two, they almost always pick Bahamut. I don't know why. Anyone ever thought about it too?
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