Sunday, November 19, 2006

An Excercise in Modulation

John Montroll’s Starfish, from Animal Origami for the Enthusiast, has always been a favorite of mine; both because of the base that it employs (a five-sided preliminary fold) and because of the nice curving effect presented as a result of the folding process. I was playing with it a few days ago and noticed an interesting property: the crease pattern can be reduced to five side-triangles, as opposed to the customary four for a waterbomb base or preliminary fold. Upon reflection, I realize that this was quite obvious, but nonetheless, I was determined to do something with this model, to help me understand its structure and the process used to design it if not out of sheer curiosity. I shaded the finished base with a pencil, and then opened it out to see where these component triangles lay. Surprisingly enough, it was a logical arrangement on the outside of a pentagon, superimposed onto the framework of a square.
This whole experience, of course, provided an interesting mathematical puzzle: If this could be done from four to five points, then why not from five to six?
I played with it on paper for awhile, and this is what I came up with:



In case you haven’t guessed, the gray bits are unused paper on the edges, the green the collapsed paper in the center, and the blue is the actual triangles that make up the model itself.

I wouldn’t be surprised if somebody’s already done this before, but it’s a neat little exercise in modulation nonetheless. I also tried this for eight points, but it didn’t work out as cleanly; there was too much extra paper sitting in the middle of the model to look very good. The crease pattern, for those who are wondering, was essentially built off of a blintz fold.

Also, many thanks to Eileen Tan for putting me onto her RSS aggregator! If you don’t know about it already, I suggest checking it out; it saves you the time of having to check six or seven different blogs each day, and it follows lots of excellent blogs that I hope mine will someday equal. It’s at http://spinflipper.com/origami/feed.php.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Welcome, Fellow Paperfolders!


Hey there, teeming blogoshpere! It's yet another origami design/presentation blog! I've been folding casually for as long as I can remember, and more seriously for the past year or so. I've gotten to the point that I think a blog might be useful, as a personal journal if nothing else. Some of you may have seen me as a hudson on the origami forum, (http://www.thekhans.me.uk/forum), or as origami_madness on Flickr, although I've been considerably less than prolific on either one.


But anyway: as I said, this is an origami design/presentation blog, so I'm going to introduce one of the models that i've done recently. On the left is me wearing Jeremy Shafer's "Flasher Hat", from his book Origami to Astonish and Amuse (published by St. Martin's Press). I folded it out of 28 inch peice of green butcher paper, and it took about 8 hours; butcher paper probably wasn't the best choice... it's too hard to work with, for models that require a massive all-in-one collapse like this one.