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  2. Nagamaki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagamaki

    The nagamaki was a long sword with a blade that could be 60 cm (24 in) or more and a handle of about equal length to the blade. [3] The blade was single-edged, resembling a naginata blade, but the handle (tsuka) of the nagamaki was not a smooth-surfaced wooden shaft as in the naginata; it was made more like a katana hilt.

  3. List of origamists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_origamists

    Sipho Mabona – Swiss and South African origami master [1] [6] who created a life-size elephant from a single piece of paper. [3]Jun Maekawa – software engineer, mathematician, and origami artist known for popularizing the method of utilizing crease patterns in designing origami models

  4. Katana Maidens: Toji No Miko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katana_Maidens:_Toji_No_Miko

    Yomi is the third-seat member of the Origami Family Elite Guard. Her fighting style is the Shinjin-ryū style. Yume Tsubakuro (燕 結芽, Tsubakuro Yume) Voiced by: Inori Minase [4] (Japanese); Jad Saxton [1] (English) Yume is the fourth-seat member of the Origami Family Elite Guard. Yume possesses the highest proficiency in swordsmanship.

  5. 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.

  6. Kenjutsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenjutsu

    It is thought likely that the first iron swords were manufactured in Japan in the fourth century, based on technology imported from China via the Korean peninsula. [4]: 1 While swords clearly played an important cultural and religious role in ancient Japan, [4]: 5, 14 in the Heian period the globally recognised curved Japanese sword (the katana) was developed and swords became important ...

  7. 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 ...

  8. Chinese paper folding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_paper_folding

    Chinese paper folding, or zhezhi (), is the art of paper folding that originated in medieval China.. The work of 20th-century Japanese paper artist Akira Yoshizawa widely popularized the Japanese word origami; however, in China and other Chinese-speaking areas, the art is referred to by the Chinese name, zhezhi.

  9. Urumi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urumi

    The sword was made of thin pliable steel, and worn round the waist like a belt, the point being fastened to the hilt through a small hole near the point. A man, intending to damage another, might make an apparently friendly call on him, his'body loosely covered with a cloth, and to all appearances unarmed.