Bumpy Tesselation - is it new?

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aesthetistician
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Bumpy Tesselation - is it new?

Post by aesthetistician »

I was fooling around, as you do, and came up with this:

Image

A few image searches didn't turn up anything that looked similar, so I wondered - is this kind of 3-d tesselation common? And does it have a name?
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Jonnycakes
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Post by Jonnycakes »

I may be wrong as it is just a pic, but that looks like a complex use of 3d box-pleating techniques. Like the kind used to make Mooser's train or implement cubes (waterbombs) into a model (like Hojyo's Thunder God). I have done something similar, but not quite the same-I only had individual cubes popping up, not complex raised patterns. Looks really cool and well folded though.
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Brimstone
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Post by Brimstone »

Other people might have come up with similar stuff, but yours is very original. It reminds me of the stretch wall by Momotami
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aesthetistician
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Post by aesthetistician »

Jonnycakes, I don't think it's box-pleated, though I've never actually done box-pleating, so perhaps I just didn't realise that's what it was! It's actually fairly simple to do, but kind of hard to describe...I could try making a video of the step if anyone was interested?

Brimstone, that wall is gorgeous!
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Post by DZIGGITAI »

that strongly reminds me of a model of a marble maze in one of the Origami USA convention booklets, though it might only vaguely be similar
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Jonnycakes
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Post by Jonnycakes »

Boxpleating is anything that uses only horizontal and 45 degree angle folds. This doesn't include shaping/detail folds, so I guess there is some leeway in what is boxpleated and what isn't.
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aesthetistician
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Post by aesthetistician »

Then I guess it is box-pleated :oops:

There's a very bad sort of CP at http://aesthetistician.livejournal.com, if anyone is interested.
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ahudson
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Post by ahudson »

I don't recognize it, although it's possible it could have been folded before I started folding tessellations. It doesn't look like the kind of stuff people were doing back then though, so I think it may well be an original work. It looks very nice, I'm going to put it on my list of models to reverse-engineer one of these days. :lol:

About that boxpleating terminology, though: generally, tessellations aren't referred to as being "boxpleated" unless they actually use that technique to form flaps, as I've done a few times (http://www.flickr.com/photos/ahudson/1987841667/ and http://www.flickr.com/photos/ahudson/2053348782/. For models like this we say that they're on a square grid (or a 90 degree grid).
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