enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Moneygami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moneygami

    The name alludes to traditional origami, which is the Japanese art of folding flat materials, generally paper, into figures resembling various objects. Other examples of moneygami include folding bills into clothing-like bits, such as dollar bills becoming bowties. [1]

  3. Toshikazu Kawasaki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toshikazu_Kawasaki

    Kawasaki new rose Kawasaki was the first to develop the technique of iso-area folding , which allows the folder to end up with each side of the paper displayed in equal amounts. It consists of building a mirror-symmetrical crease pattern and then collapsing it to find a finished form, usually a geometric shape such as a cube.

  4. Origami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origami

    The paper folded vertically is called 'tategami' (竪紙), while the paper folded horizontally is called 'origami', and origami has a lower status than tategami. This style of letter began to be used at the end of the Heian period , and in the Kamakura period it was used as a complaint, and origami came to refer to the complaint itself.

  5. Crease pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crease_pattern

    Crease pattern for a swordsman. A crease pattern (commonly referred to as a CP) [1] is an origami diagram that consists of all or most of the creases in the final model, rendered into one image. This is useful for diagramming complex and super-complex models, where the model is often not simple enough to diagram efficiently.

  6. Miura fold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miura_fold

    The Miura fold is a form of rigid origami, meaning that the fold can be carried out by a continuous motion in which, at each step, each parallelogram is completely flat. This property allows it to be used to fold surfaces made of rigid materials, making it distinct from the Kresling fold and Yoshimura fold which cannot be rigidly folded and ...

  7. Origami paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origami_paper

    Origami paper and a traditional origami crane. Origami paper is the paper used for origami, the art of Japanese paper folding.The only real requirement of the folding medium is that it must be able to hold a crease, but should ideally also be thinner than regular paper for convenience when multiple folds over the same small paper area are required (e.g. such as would be the case if creating an ...

  8. Mathematics of paper folding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematics_of_paper_folding

    The new algorithm built upon work that they presented in their paper in 1999 that first introduced a universal algorithm for folding origami shapes that guarantees a minimum number of seams. The algorithm will be included in Origamizer, a free software for generating origami crease patterns that was first released by Tachi in 2008. [48]

  9. Rigid origami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rigid_origami

    Rigid origami is a branch of origami which is concerned with folding structures using flat rigid sheets joined by hinges. That is, unlike in traditional origami, the panels of the paper cannot be bent during the folding process; they must remain flat at all times, and the paper only folded along its hinges.