Page 1 of 2

Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 2nd, 2019, 7:29 pm
by NeverCeaseToCrease
Hello folders,

This month we have a unique challenge. The theme will be improvement.

The primary interpretation of this theme will be this: You will find a model that you have folded in the past, and then as the theme suggests, you will improve it and submit your improved version.

Rules: the original model should be folded about 3 months ago or older (older is better). If you can find a photo of the model when you folded it, please upload that photo along with your entry, which will be the improved model. If you only have the physical form of the original model, you can photograph it now, but don't edit it.
Your improved model can be a major shaping improvement (does not mean "better paper!") or a structural improvement. If you have a major structural improvement that we might not recognize as the same model, you can upload a crease pattern to prove the similarities.
Your improved model should be one uncut square (MC as the only acceptable adhesive), but it's ok if your original model wasn't.

Tahaorigami will judge. Most improved models will be regarded higher.

We had 9 contestants last month, which was the most we've had in a while. Can we match or beat last month? Lets get 10 people this time! All submissions, even the last minute ones, are appreciated.

Here is an example of what an entry might look like.

Before:Image This was folded sometime around 2014. A scrawny, ugly, sewer rat.
After:Image This was folded in 2017. This rat really fattened up!

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 2nd, 2019, 9:58 pm
by Baltorigamist
Definitely an interesting topic, though I would personally rule out shaping-based improvements. Changing the shaping isn't exactly a new design.

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 2nd, 2019, 11:10 pm
by NeverCeaseToCrease
I guess so to a point, but sometimes a model can be drastically improved without changing the base (structural improvement). For example, bending an elbow or something would not be considered a major shaping change, but pleating that elbow to create texture would be significant without changing the base (although I'd hope that was not the only change). In the end, it will be up to Taha to judge what counts as having improved and what does not.

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 5th, 2019, 8:48 am
by Grace159
Does a significant colour change count? For example the original origami brocade by Minako Ishibashi is one solid colour, however roughly two years ago I worked out how to make it two coloured. Which looks quite dramatic with red and black paper.

Sent from my SM-J120ZN using Tapatalk

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 6th, 2019, 3:41 pm
by Gerardo
Hi NeverCeaseToCrease! So, does this month's theme mean variations of models form other designers are allowed and even expected?

Cheers!

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 7th, 2019, 3:51 am
by NeverCeaseToCrease
Well, I wasn't intending for it to be about other people's models. That would open up the can of worms regarding copyright and whether this or that modification constitutes a new design, etc. For this reason it would be probably better to do a remake of one's own model.

If you have no previous models of your own, I suppose a modification of a traditional model can't hurt.
And again, it will be up to Taha to judge who really improved.

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 7th, 2019, 5:31 pm
by Bodo
Here is my entry !

Kangaroo I designed two years ago:
ImageKangaroo by bodorigami, auf Flickr

Kangaroo I designed recently
ImageKangaroo by bodorigami, auf Flickr

Its completely different structurally and it is easier to fold. Based on a birdbase.
32x32 cm kraft paper

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 7th, 2019, 11:05 pm
by firstfold
Here is an update of a Series of Folds I did in 2007:

Image

These were all folded with just one rectangle for the combined flower and the Butterfly - White (or Brown) on one side and colored on the other.

Image

Image



Each Butterfly and Each Flower uses a different folding technique. I just designed and completed the top fold today (3/7/19). The folds between petals bends the Flower petal into a curve without additional creases.

In 2007 I also made a flower and Butterfly fold based on a LaFosse butterfly and my Flower (shown with Michael's permission on Flickr. One version has Two LaFosse butterflies (modified for the larger fold) on the Santee flower.

I chose to make the simplest possible butterfly of my own design for this latest incarnation.

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 8th, 2019, 8:38 pm
by Nepafarius
It's been a long time since I entered a competition, and I've been putting off updating this model for too long.

I made this Bacteriophage a while back
Image
I never liked how it turned out, the body tapered, the legs were a mess, and the base plate was clunky and dull

This is the redesigned Bacteriophage
Image
The head remained the same (though it looks different in the picture because of the angle), but the body have been uniformed and straightened like I originally intended. The legs are still a nightmare to make, but look less messy. The spikes at the bottom representing the base plate now look more menacing in my opinion, like a piece of drilling machinery

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 9th, 2019, 1:02 am
by firstfold
Here is a video with a partial crease pattern showing the development from separate folds to a combined folds

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 16th, 2019, 10:23 pm
by jeko
My original sandcastle from June 2014
Image
CP: http://origami.jenskober.de/diagrams/sandcastle_v0.pdf

and the new version (could be tesselated)
Image
CP: http://origami.jenskober.de/diagrams/sandcastle2_v0.pdf

The shape is the same, the structure very different

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 17th, 2019, 12:48 am
by Grace159
This is lovely Jeko, both the growth in the model as well as how you've represented the ocean.

Sent from my SM-J120ZN using Tapatalk

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: March 31st, 2019, 8:39 am
by Folderp
For this challenge, I decided to update my turtle from ages ago.
ImageTurtle by Folderp, on Flickr

The result is this *somewhat* better turtle.
ImageTurtle 2.0 by Folderp, on Flickr
The main change is to the front flippers, which are now a decent size. The head is also significantly improved with better rounding (not from shaping). The method of creating the tail was also improved. Most other differences are from shaping, which is far better than in the original.
I still count it as the same design, because the stucture, layout and base are very similar, but the model is still about ten times better.

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: April 1st, 2019, 3:07 am
by Tahaorigami
Last day left guys. Last minute entries are welcome!

Re: Monthly Design Challenge March 2019

Posted: April 1st, 2019, 4:49 am
by Grace159
The pink flower box is a model I created around a week ago. It has the same basic folds as Gerardo's 'Box in a Flower' which was created in 2010 so it is a variation.

The interesting thing I found was that it can be made using either two blintz bases (a fortune teller) or three.

The leafy flower pot on the left is made from a three blintz folded square flower box and can neatly hold a flower box made from the same size paper. ImageImage

Sent from my SM-J120ZN using Tapatalk