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  2. Tamatebako (origami) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamatebako_(origami)

    The Tamatebako (玉手箱) is an origami model named after the tamatebako of Japanese folk tale. It is a modular cube design that can be opened from any side. If more than one face of the model is opened, the cube falls apart and cannot easily be reconstructed.

  3. Sonobe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonobe

    Two possible creators are Toshie Takahama and Mitsunobu Sonobe, who published several books together and were both members of Sōsaku Origami Gurūpu '67. The earliest appearance of a Sonobe module was in a cube attributed to Mitsunobu Sonobe in the Sōsaku Origami Gurūpu '67's magazine Origami in Issue 2 (1968). [3]

  4. Modular origami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modular_origami

    Modular origami or unit origami is a multi-stage paper folding technique in which several, or sometimes many, sheets of paper are first folded into individual modules or units and then assembled into an integrated flat shape or three-dimensional structure, usually by inserting flaps into pockets created by the folding process. [3]

  5. Jeannine Mosely - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeannine_Mosely

    Mosely has created several, large, crowd sourced, origami projects with business cards, as well as many smaller business card models. In 1994 she invented a method for linking traditional business card cubes together into structures that could be very large.

  6. Paper fortune teller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paper_fortune_teller

    Origami historian David Mitchell has found many 19th-century European sources mentioning a paper "salt cellar" or "pepper pot" (the latter often folded slightly differently). The first of these to unambiguously depict the paper fortune teller is an 1876 German book for children.

  7. List of books about polyhedra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_books_about_polyhedra

    3D Geometric Origami: Modular Origami Polyhedra. Dover. ISBN 9780486135601. [3] Multimodular Origami Polyhedra: Archimedeans, Buckyballs and Duality, 2002. [4] Beginner's Book of Modular Origami Polyhedra: The Platonic Solids, 2008. Modular Origami Polyhedra, also with Lewis Simon, 2nd ed., 1999. [5] Mitchell, David (1997).

  8. Origami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origami

    Origami tessellation is a branch that has grown in popularity after 2000. A tessellation is a collection of figures filling a plane with no gaps or overlaps. In origami tessellations, pleats are used to connect molecules such as twist folds together in a repeating fashion.

  9. Huzita–Hatori axioms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huzita–Hatori_axioms

    The Huzita–Justin axioms or Huzita–Hatori axioms are a set of rules related to the mathematical principles of origami, describing the operations that can be made when folding a piece of paper. The axioms assume that the operations are completed on a plane (i.e. a perfect piece of paper), and that all folds are linear.

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