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How to fold anything
Brian Chan
Origami
Single sheet(s) of paper,
Most commonly square
Shaping by folding
No cutting
Traditional origami
some examples
QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
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QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
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Modern origami
Tesselations
Modulars
Geometric/abstract
Representational
Tesselations
some examples
Modular origami
some examples
Abstract/geometric models
some examples
Representational models
some examples
Super-complex models
some examples
Uniaxial design
QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.Applicable to “stick figure” models
Uniaxial design - circles
circular regions fold into flaps
flaps become appendages
Touching circles become “molecules”
Crease Patterns
Crease Patterns
Crease Patterns
Crease Patterns
Crease Patterns
Folding Demonstration
Sailboat
Beaver
Folding non-paper...
what else can be folded?
Folding non-paper...
musical instruments
Folding non-paper...
Folding non-paper...
other inventions
Acknowledgments/reference
MIT Hobby Shop - hobbyshop.mit.edu
Michael Hawley and EG
Hal Levin and TTI/Vanguard
Robert Lang
Japan Origami Academic Society (JOAS)
Origami USA