

(The white spots are as a result of marking a random grid of points for the tessellation; apparently chalk pencil does not rub off of paper easily.)
Damian, did you create Dragon this month? If so, I invite you to please contribute to the current monthly design challenge here in the forum. It's the 10th anniversary of the challenge; we're trying to have as many participating models as possible. That's why there are so many themes; there's even a dragon theme.Damian Malicki wrote:Dragon designed and folded by me
Those are well folded the lizard is my favouriteNeverCeaseToCrease wrote:I've been trying out some models with kraft paper. It's thin and pretty strong, but the real reason I like it is that it wet folds extremely well and easily.
These four models were all folded with kraft paper and wet folded.
Shrimp from a CP on Yagob's flickr
Lizard from a CP on Yagob's flickr
Cerberus from Works of Satoshig Kamiya 2
Roosevelt Elk From ODS 2
You can tell how well they keep their shape: the shrimps' thick body can stay compressed, the roosevelt Elk's horns stay twisted, the lizards thick legs stay bent, and Cerberus' wide body keeps its round form.
Sorry, I didn't see itGerardo wrote:Damian, did you create Dragon this month? If so, I invite you to please contribute to the current monthly design challenge here in the forum. It's the 10th anniversary of the challenge; we're trying to have as many participating models as possible. That's why there are so many themes; there's even a dragon theme.Damian Malicki wrote:Dragon designed and folded by me
It's probably Nicolas Terry's Copper Tissue-Foil Paper:Gerardo wrote:Folded from a thin 30 x 30cm (12 x 12 in) duo colored grainy metallic paper from Origami-Shop.com. Do anyone know its name? The other side has a matte brownish color.