In this blog inspired by Wolf, I showcase models that I design and post information of interest to the origami folder. I also have a photostream in Flickr (the link is down there). Do enjoy your visit here and don't forget to tag or leave a few comments on my work! If you have folded any of my models, please send their pictures to me, and I will be delighted to publish them in this blog. By the way, please check out the "Important Links" below the archives; they are that important :) The "Origami Singapore" page has links to other folders from Singapore. Have fun!

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Dwarf (Continued)

Following on the last post...

Remember the pickaxe I made? I created a few other "tools" for the dwarf, namely the shovel, an axe and for some obscure reason, a kettle.


I had to create all of these by myself, and the axe was made as a weapon, due to my mother's comments that the dwarf looked like a nasty gang member holding the pickaxe like that.



It was fun designing the tools myself, especially the axe. The dwarf "held" the tools by using the thumb as a hook to reach into the lengthwise gap on the handles of the tools and surling the other fingers around the handle.



Behold the kettle!

Too bad the kettle's handle would never close up, leaving an open handle. Still, it didn't come out too bad...

I used up a whole sheet of A4 paper between all these models; 1 square for the dwarf, and the remainder was divided into 4 equal rectangles to fold 4 different tools.

I even tried to stick all the tools into the dwarf. The result was a very scary dwarf armed to the teeth with miscellaneous tools.



Now he really looks like some gang member. That cooks. And attacks innocent bystanders with a pickaxe.

My, my, that's not pure anymore, is it?


Origami as Pure as Snow
shonen

Monday, May 28, 2007

Dwarf

I was browsing the web when I found this CP on Eric Joisel's Origami:


It's not my fault if it's blur, at least I managed to decipher the writing.

The numbers at the left after all three curly brackets "}" are, I think, "2/6", which means that the paper is divided into 3.

This is not my creation, I just found it on the web and folded it. I'm kind of saving up my creations to post on longer intervals.










Here's what it looks like after I folded it:



The main things you have to do after collapsing the base: separate the hat from the head by sinking a little of the head flap in (decide which flap is which by yourself), form the face and beard, fold the big triangular body flaps together to form a sort of tunic, shape the legs and hands, form the shoes and finally crumple and bend the figure as you wish to give it a realistic touch. Don't forget to fold either the pickaxe or the shovel and add it to the dwarf!

(I'm not breaking the rules 'cos I treat the pickaxe and the dwarf as 2 separate models.)

Good Luck with this crease pattern!


Origami as Pure as Snow
shonen

Friday, May 25, 2007

Knight on Horseback

I created this quite a few years ago, with a clear goal in mind and nothing to start on. So, I just played with the paper a little and I got something that looked like this:





Cool dude on a horse with a sword and board.
One big disadvantage of this model is that the front legs are rather shorter than the back ones... It keeps falling face-down.

Unlike the majority of the origami blogs I have seen so far, I do not plan out the Crease Pattern and collapse from it. Instead, I usually just play around with a base until I get what I want. That needs a lot of luck.

I used a few usual "algorithms" in making the model, like the spread-squashing of a point to form the face, double-rabbiting the legs of the horse and a good method for forming the tail and head of a horse. These algorithms are very useful in creating your own models, and they can only be found from experience, folding lots of other models.

I did not record any diagrams for this model, and I kind of forgot how to fold it and had to take apart one of my earlier models and analyse the folding method and refold it again.
However, thanks to Wolf and her advice on crease pattern software, I learnt how to use Inkscape and drew a CP for the Knight on Horseback.
Behold, my first-ever CP!



Hope it looks good... At least it looks less daunting than some CPs from other websites.
Black lines indicate mountain folds, while red lines indicate valleys.

It's mainly a weird version of the Blintzed Frog Base with one of its flaps stretched, except for one special part. Look at the top-left section carefully. You will see that creases that were mountain folds in other sections are valleys in there. This is no coincidence! In fact, in the early stages of folding this model, the paper is folded into a preliminary base and two adjacent flaps are folded together as one! Those flaps turn out as the top-left section and half of both the top-right section and bottom-left section. All clear?

It's less simple than it looks, so try it and see!
Please leave comments regarding the CP and any difficulties you may have encountered folding this model. If you really have folded it, please send me a copy. I may even publish it as a post!

Wolf has kindly folded the model for me to try out the CP, and she sent a picture of it to me. Here it is...





Wasn't really what I expected, but it looked cool anyway.

Special thanks again to Wolf for her advice!


Origami as Pure as Snow
shonen