Just tissue?
Just tissue?
It is possible to use only the tissue paper (without the aluminum) to the most complex modals, like the ryujins?
The worst mistake you can do
is to be afraid to make a mistake
is to be afraid to make a mistake
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Re: Just tissue?
I've never tried it myself, but I believe plain tissue paper is far too weak and thin to hold up to much folding. Even with MC, it would either tear or crumple, or both.
I know some people have successfully folded complex models with double tissue, but still, something like the Ryuzin is out of the question without something stronger.
I know some people have successfully folded complex models with double tissue, but still, something like the Ryuzin is out of the question without something stronger.
Re: Just tissue?
double tissue is fairly resilient. i don't think anyone has really tried to make the ryujins with double tissue because making such a large square with double tissue is somewhat impractical.
Re: Just tissue?
Shuki Kato has a couple of folds on his flickr from single tissue ( Kamiyas Phoenix and Nham Van Son's Two Headed Dragon, I believe) which look fantastic.
This is the link for the paper he used from his photostream.http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00006 ... UTF8&psc=1
I've tried this paper as double tissue and it's great (nice and strong and bonds really well) but the colour bleeds out like mad when you wet it. Maybe I should have a go with a single sheet... doubt I've got the skills though
This is the link for the paper he used from his photostream.http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00006 ... UTF8&psc=1
I've tried this paper as double tissue and it's great (nice and strong and bonds really well) but the colour bleeds out like mad when you wet it. Maybe I should have a go with a single sheet... doubt I've got the skills though
My Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/edg82/
Re: Just tissue?
Try Pacon's "Kolorfast" tissue. Same stuff, but doesn't bleed.
Re: Just tissue?
Cheers, I might try some of thatabnyc wrote:Try Pacon's "Kolorfast" tissue. Same stuff, but doesn't bleed.
Thought I'd have a go with some single tissue (un-sized) for a box pleated damselfly I'm working on:
The pre-creasing wasn't much fun due to visibility but after that it was fine. Reversing creases went surprisingly well for such thin paper and it felt quite strong. The base came out very neat (by my standards at least) and shaping was ok despite the softness of the paper
My Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/edg82/
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Re: Just tissue?
Does anyone here have experience with treating single unryu? I'm hoping to use some for a couple upcoming models, but I don't want to tear the paper.
Re: Just tissue?
^^^^
bit of a tricky question. if, by unryu, you mean the thai unryu like the ones here, then yes. it can be hard seeing creases and reversing a crease anywhere where there's a large fiber, but it's doable.
i say all this because i honestly don't see the difference between unryu and the mulberry tissue you see on origami-shop, except that the mulberry tissue seems cheaper.
bit of a tricky question. if, by unryu, you mean the thai unryu like the ones here, then yes. it can be hard seeing creases and reversing a crease anywhere where there's a large fiber, but it's doable.
i say all this because i honestly don't see the difference between unryu and the mulberry tissue you see on origami-shop, except that the mulberry tissue seems cheaper.
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Re: Just tissue?
Thanks.
Treating went fine, so now I just have to decide exactly what I'm gonna fold from it.
Treating went fine, so now I just have to decide exactly what I'm gonna fold from it.