Origami Made Easy Ebook. Vanda Battaglia

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Origami Made Easy Ebook - Vanda Battaglia

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a Square from an Irregular Sheet

       Making a Square from a Rectangular Sheet

       Dividing a Sheet into Thirds and Fifths

      Find the folding demonstration videos on

       www.tuttlepublishing.com/origami-made-easy-kit-demos

       INTRODUCTION

      The Japanese word origami means “to fold paper.” It derives from the words ori (“to fold”) and kami (“paper”). Even though the word originally referred to the action of folding a piece of paper to create a model, “origami” has come to refer to the models themselves. An enormous variety of figures can be made using a combination of a small number of basic origami folds.

      The practice of origami is over a thousand years old and is closely bound to the invention of paper. Traditionally, paper making has been traced to China at the beginning of the second century CE. In 105 CE, Cai Lun, an official attached to the Chinese imperial court during the Han Dynasty (202 BCE–220 CE), presented a sheet of paper made from mulberry and other fibers to the emperor. In the seventh century, paper making moved east, first to Korea and then Japan, in about 610 CE, where it was perfected and reached a high level of refinement. Japanese hand-made paper, known as washi (from wa, “Japanese” and shi, “paper”), made from various natural materials, became intertwined with Japanese religion, culture and life. It was used to make various everyday objects, such as clothes, household goods and toys, as well as ritual objects. Even today, paper is used on every important occasion in the Land of the Rising Sun, and is held in the highest esteem. In Japan, origami is an art that is as highly regarded as painting and sculpture.

      Origami came to the West fairly late, probably in the eighteenth or nineteenth century, where it quickly became popular but in a completely different way from in Japan. In the West, the art has also followed a long and interesting course. While it has been stripped of any religious significance, it has, nonetheless, demonstrated its extreme versatility in numerous fields and on every level, from the world of teaching, via geometry, to space technology. Today, we are familiar with a good many “classical” figures passed down by the Japanese. But the tendency in the West has been towards experimentation and forging new directions. Geometric and modular origami, in particular, the latter combining a number of identical pieces to form a complete model, have received strong support, and have been considerably enhanced by modern as well as traditional means of communication.

      New techniques have been invented to solve old problems. These have been combined to form a modern theory of origami. Thanks to this, it is possible to devise highly complex models encapsulating a number of subjects of mathematical and technical interest. Nonetheless, origami continues to offer the majority of people the simple pleasure of a creative manual activity.

      Folding is highly enjoyable. It is fun to fold boxes of various degrees of complexity for any number of occasions, to fold stars and decorations while playing with colors, to fold animals in both stylized and astonishingly realistic forms. In short, origami is play, for hands and for the mind. After learning the techniques of folding the bases—indispensable to creating your own models—you will be able to give free rein to your imagination and create new ones.

      We often hear people say, “I bought a book on origami but I can’t figure out how to do it.” Often the difficulty lies in the language of origami. It is a highly symbolic language because it uses symbols to indicate the folds to be made. Knowledge of these symbols is fundamental to mastering this ancient paper art.

      For a long time we had been aware that there was a need for a guide that would introduce the world of origami to beginners. Thus, we were delighted when a publisher suggested we write a short book that would explain and make the language of origami more easily understood.

      This book starts at square one, as a beginners’ guide should, and is aimed at people who know nothing at all about origami. We lead you gradually through the sequence of learning and mastering the symbols as well the strategies and tricks necessary to read and understand origami diagrams. Above all, we want you to enjoy folding paper. We have done our best to provide you with a complete, clear and coherent overview.

      Before you start on your origami journey, you need to find a solid surface on which to work and a large amount of paper to practice the instructions and, later, to fold the models. In this book, we first introduce the main folds, one by one, without asking you to create anything with them. The more you practice forming the individual folds, the quicker you will memorize the various moves and their associated symbols. By repeating the individual folds, over and over again, they will soon become second nature. This will give you the confidence to combine a series of folds later on.

      You may become frustrated at the beginning. The steps may seem impossible to follow and exe-cute. But if you look carefully at the next step in the sequence, things will usually become clearer. If this strategy doesn’t help, put the work aside, sleep on it, and begin again from scratch the next day.

      Folding paper is a highly relaxing, enjoyable and educational mental exercise. As the famous origami artist Akira Yoshizawa used to say, “When the hands are busy, the heart is at peace.”

      Wishing you many peaceful folds.

      Francesco and Vanda

      HOW TO FOLD PAPER

      One aspect of origami that is often taken for granted is how to fold paper. Paper is much more “sensitive” than, say, a voice recording. Any trace of sound can be erased from recorded material, but this is impossible with paper. A fold once executed can never be undone. It is indelible. This characteristic of paper is sometimes cherished and deliberately exploited in order to create a certain type of origami.

      It is necessary to treat each fold as important even before executing it. Generally, the layer to be folded is lifted with one hand, which draws its edge to a central point while the other hand holds the sheet firmly in place. The edge is thus positioned so that it aligns with the baseline. At this point, nothing is folded and the sheet is still softly rounded at the place of the fold. The alignment needs to be carefully checked at this stage to ensure that everything is in place. Only then should the paper be delicately flattened out, with a light movement towards the fold’s corner. The corner must then be passed over again, from the center towards the outside, first along one edge, and then the other. Once this has been done, finish the fold by passing over its edge one more time with the back of a fingernail to make it crisp and well-defined. These moves will soon become automatic. This is why it is essential to master the foundations from the start.

      Another thing that is often taken for granted, especially by beginners, is the importance of the surface on which the folds are made. It must be smooth and hard. A kitchen table without a tablecloth is ideal. In Japanese temples, it is customary to fold the paper in the air, to avoid contact with any surface that might “contaminate”

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