Hyperbolic Origami? V-Pleats Vs Diverging Pleats Chinaqat Video • Hyperbolic Origami Ron Resch Video • the ron resch paper an... Darius B'Alexander on Flickr flic.kr/s/aHsjcWABXL Robert Lang Video • When Math Met Origami ...
This Origami has many folds and the finished model looks quite technical but actually there are only a few steps. 1. Fold the diverging pleats. 2. Fold the parallel mountain folds. 3. Fold the diagonal valley folds. 4. Collapse the model. This is a great approach as it simplifies the process and you will see that it is not as technical as you might have thought. Just a bit fiddly. Steps 2 & 3 involve many repetitive folds. All critical folds are shown at least once at regular speed. Use the same method for the folds shown in fast motion. A4 printer paper can give good results but can suffer with wear & tear. Try a light card, 150gsm works well - gives great definition and retains shape. Be lucky people...
Fascinating design. I can't help but imagine this design done with a cnc plasma or laser cutter to make perforations in thin sheet metal to make the folds easier.
One interesting thought is, while we usually consider geometric constructions to be rigidly reinforced by the use of triangles, this demonstrates how they can also be used to create complex three dimensional constructions that have surprising flexibility, yet are constrained to a specific range of motions from a minimal, folded, compressed to an open, expanded form. Research on the opened forms like at 24:05-:10 might result in stable, load-bearing roof designs which could be simply retracted sideways, without loss of strength during the intermediate phases.
Thanks for this! I enjoy doing still life photography with miscellaneous objects to create a unique sense of art. I was wanting something just as special to fit as some sort of architectural representation, and saw this knowing this was the one! I had also wanted to do origami so I've been using pieces I've made using YT videos to help along with the process. I'm gonna give this a try for sure~
Paul Reichert if you are interested in hyperbolic parabolas of varying shapes, do the same with a hexagon, triangle etc. that you would a square. And take a look at curved folding.
Good job on solving this by the way. The last bit where it goes against the uniform pleats threw me off when I solved it long ago. (I was not the original creator Of the one in chinaqats video)
Es un esplendido trabajo, bellísimo. Lleva demasiados pasos, pero con el tiempo necesario y la paciencia, espero lograrlo. Gracias por compartir su trabajo.
This is so interesting! I want to try this with a thin leather or suede. You think that can be done? I've made origami before with clear plastic vinyl and it worked. This seems too complicated though.
Samantha, not sure if it would work with suede/leather as they are not as rigid as paper and may not retain the folds effectively. You could maybe stitch the folds? That could work?
Fascinating stuff! I had to slow the video down, but I did it! I really enjoyed folding it. Very nice how I felt it finding it's way while collapsing. I made it in yellow and it looks a bit like Pikachu! ;-)
So this is the solution to a origami puzzle? Meaning you can learn to recognize certain shapes and to make them and use them flexibly like a modular system? Which books teach me such things?
quinxx12 The puzzle was Chinaqats original video. Take a look at Sara Adams post, ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-k1BH_FEUZWo.html Origamishop.com is a good source of information Be lucky...
chileconcon the steps from 10:00 to 10:50 are mirrored on the other side of the centreline, using the creases made with the ruler as reference. Hope this helps. Good luck...
thanks toby. I managed to reach til end! interesting shape. I used the A3 tracing paper instead and some edges ripped a little bit, but it looks great overall.
Yes it can, but the problem might lie in marking the sides in the left and right center quadrants that lead into the middle. I made this long before this video was posted. It was actually a tricky solve.
Dragvar Renegade I was thinking the same thing, you'd have to steam these pleats and the moisture would weaken the folds. I'm studying fashion right now and making some origami pleats into things my research led me here. Going to experiment with this type of stuff
Hey I'm chinaqat [signed in as another avatar] wow it's so cool you're showing how this is done - it only took 25 years for me to find a teacher, thanks!
I can see the effort you put in this video but you sped up so many important scenes, it’s already complicated af and you’ve made the instructions rly unclear. I had to slow it down to x0.25 speed, but still gave up later on as I literally can’t comprehend what you’re doing.
정대영 There is a question mark in the title of my video, so I am also asking this question. However, I did state in the video that I don’t think the curve is hyperbolic. This is because the curve goes beyond 90 degrees, and a hyperbolic curve never does. Thanks for watching...
This tutorual is really bad and honestly jist dont put music over it if itll be sped up, so many sequences of folds are horribly dificult to follow because of random speed ups aswell. Just post the raw video without music that would be more enjoyable.