Model IndexA. Miranda van de Beek Draak 4
Alexandra Kalashnikova Christmas Tree 6
Alexandra Kalashnikova Snowflake 7
Alexandru Malekshahian Rose Frame 8
Anastasiya Rasputkina Butterfly 9
Ancella Simoes Christmas Lantern 10
Andrey Ermakov Doll Dress 12
Andrey Lukyanov Plexus Hearts 14
Anna Kastlunger Lizard 17
Arno Pfingstner Einfacher Pustekreisel 20
Arno Pfingstner Sockel für Würfel 21
Bennett Arnstein Chain of 4 Equilateral Triangles with internal Pockets 22
Bennett Arnstein Staple less Connection 23
Bennett Arnstein Why Vee Origami Glider 25
Blythe Creamer Pteranodon 27
Chris Taylor Kerry's Rose 28
Damian Kowalski Jackalope 35
Damian Kowalski Not Flying Dragon 38
Dirk Eisner CoSID Corner Star 41
Doris Lauinger Kleines Geschenktäschchen / Gift Bag 48
Franz Muskovich Dodostricock 50
Franz Rogar Fugu 54
Gilad Aharoni Flag of Denmark 56
Hans Werner Guth Wurzel2Papier Dreieckedelstein 58
Hubert Villeneuve Young Dragon 84
Jacob Rossman Aguman 87
Jedidiah Nixon Crossbow 89
Jedidiah Nixon Generic Firearm 90
Jedidiah Nixon War Axe 91
Jens Kober Alien 92
Jens Kober Candle 93
Jens Kober Kite 95
Jens Kober Lizard 96
Jens Kober Nodding Dog 98
Jens Kober Penguin 101
Jens Kober Turtle 103
Jorge E. Jaramillo Striped Cup 106
Joseph Organtini Narwhal 108
Klaus Dieter Ennen Baum Schmuck 10 110
Klaus Dieter Ennen Herz 57 113
Klaus Dieter Ennen Katze 12 116
Klaus Dieter Ennen Möwe 4 122
Klaus Dieter Ennen Anika‘s Schachtel 126
Klaus Dieter Ennen Stern Pia Marie 127
Klaus Dieter Ennen Stern Heiko 129
Klaus Dieter Ennen Teddy Bär 131
Klaus Dieter Ennen Weihnachtsmann 4 137
Liana Masalimova Flower 140
Ma Yong Roast Chicken 141
Malachi Brown Tricorner Hat v.1.1 143
Marie Kalistratova Rat 147
Mark Orme Broken Heart v2 148
Mark Orme Impossible Triangle 149
Mark Orme Kitten 150
Michael Weinstein Echo Dish 152
Miroslav Mrajca Television 155
Olga Soukharevsky Envelope with Horse 157
Omer Shalev Tree with Birds 158
Pavel Halyapin Talon 160
Phillip Curl 8 Pointed Star 161
Robin De Baets Goomba 163
Sanja Srbljinovic Cucek Bowl, Bag or a Boat? 164
Shuki Kato Simple Dragonfly 165
Ulrike Krallmann Wenzel Trisel 169
Wilhelm Moeller Stern Marlene 171
Yuri Sarudiansky Love and Peace 175
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hristmas tree Kalashnikova Alexandra, Eniseysk, Russia
1. 2. 3.
4. 5. 6.
7. 8. 9.
10. 11. 12.
13. 14. necessary 3 modules 1 variant 2 variant
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Snowflake Kalashnikova Alexandra, Eniseysk, Russia
9 modules 10 modules
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Aleexanddru MMalekkshahhian Rosee Frame
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ButterflyRasputkina Anastasiya, 12 years, Eniseysk, Russia
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Andrey Ermakov Doll Dress
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1. Outline the midpoints
of the sides...
2. To bend the bottom side
3. Bend the bottom corners.
Turn over
4. Bend the sides to the middle
5. Bend in the middle between
the marked lines.
6. Fold and unfold as indicated.
Turn over
Etude "Plexus hearts"Author: Andrey Lukyanov (Ukraine)
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8. Fold on all marked lines7. Bend in the middle between
the marked lines.
9. Result. Turn Over 10. Bend corners
11. Petal folds 12. Valey folds all coners...
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13. Then the top and bottom.
Turn over
Photo by Iver: http://www.flickr.com/photos/63433412@N05
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LizardDesign & Diagrams by Anna Kastlunger (2010)
http://www.origamiaustria.at/ Page 1 / 3
90°
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http://www.origamiaustria.at/ Page 2 / 3
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http://www.origamiaustria.at/ Page 3 / 3
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CHAIN-OF-4-EQUILATERAL- TRIANGLES WITH INTERNAL POCKETS
At first glance it appears that this module has no locks. However, when used as a stellation module
to make a stellated icosahedron, every three-sided pyramid can have two connections locked by
folding over the pocket after a tab has been inserted. If you use tweezers and the ball is in its early
stages so that you have access to the inside, even the third connection of many pyramids can be
locked. Inventor Unknown
2.0
1.0
1
2
Pinch up the middle crease as a mountain.
Pivoting it around its lower end, swing the upper
end to touch the horizontal crease.
3
4
5 6
Unfold to step 2. Steps 2 - 5 have created two
creases at an angle of thirty degrees
to the center crease.
7Rotate 180 degrees and repeat steps
2 - 5 to make two new creases at the
other end of the center crease.
8 9
This is the crease pattern of the
finished module.
A
B C
D
E
F
IG
H
J
I
J
A
F
E
B
D
C
G
H
A
D
C
B
F
E
G
H
10 11 12
Bennett Arnstein 11 / 9 / 2010C
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Staple-less Connectionby Bennett Arnstein
Shown for two sheets, both the same size, and lined up so only one sheet is visible.Both sheets are folded at each step, and the thickness of the sheets and the shifting of the sheets
when folded are ignored.
1
Create a short 45-degree
crease through the upper
left corner.
2 3
4 5 6
7
8 9
Page 1
C Bennett Arnstein 3 / 2 / 2011
SEE STEP 10
ON PAGE 2
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Staple-less ConnectionPage 2
10 11 12
Change the valley crease made in
step 1 to a mountain crease.
Add two valley creases to help keep
the crease of step 10 folded.
13
Connection completed.
C Bennett Arnstein 5 / 19 / 2011
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Why-Vee Origami Glider
Inventor Unknown
1 2 3
Start with a letter-size sheet.
Taught by Chila Caldera
4
5
Fold up by wrapping around
the lined-up horizontal edges.
A
A
B6
Locate point B approximately one-finger-
width to the right of the centerline, and
make corner A touch the centerline.
Then make corner C meet corner A at
the centerline to get to the next step.
C
D
C A
7 8
9
Fold corner D down to cover
corners C and A.
Fold the right half to the back
by mountain-folding along
the centerline.
B
E
On the top layer only,
fold edge EB to the
centerline.
Then repeat on the
back.
Page 1
C Bennett Arnstein 8 / 10 / 2011
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10
Why-Vee Airplane Glider
Page 2
This completes the folding.
Let the paper unfold naturally
and adjust the creases until it looks
like an airplane. Do not unfold the
crease of step 7.
11
This is a view of the airplane in flight. You are behind
the airplane, looking forward; slightly above and
looking down; and slightly to the left and looking right.
The centerline should be creased sharply so the
fuselage looks like a capital letter “V”. The wings
should angle upwards from the fuselage, like the
slanted bars on a capital letter “Y”.
12
This is another view of the airplane in flight
You are ih front of the airplane looking aft,
above the airplane looking down, and to the right
of the airplane looking left. There is some folded
paper inside the wing, between the top layer and
the bottom layer, which separates the two layers
forming a Klein-Fogelman undercarriage.
The rear tips of the wings are shown with a gentle
upward curvature to give the airplane a slight
nose-up trim.
13
This is a side view of the airplane as it is
flying to the left. The heavy black circle
shows the approximate point to grasp
when launching the airplane. To launch,
throw the airplane at an upward angle.
Bennett Arnstein 9 / 12 / 2011C
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Kerry’s Rose, by Chris Taylor
1. Start white side up.
Crease the diagonals.
2. Fold the lower edge to the
centre and make a small pinch
3. Fold the edge up to the
mark you just made, and
make another pinch
4. Fold the far edge down to the mark
you just made. Crease only in the
central section between diagonals.
A 9” square will
give a rose about
4” in diameter.
Most paper types
can be used, but
for final shaping it
is good to use
something that can
be wet folded, or
that will hold its
shape, such as
tissue foil.
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5. Make three more valley folds
symmetrical to the previous one,
forming a small square in the
centre. The sides of this square
are 1/8 the size of the paper.
6. Turn the paper over. Make a
valley fold from one corner of
the central square, parallel to
the diagonal.
7. Make three more
symmetrically. The four
diagonal folds are
highlighted in this picture.
8. Make a twist fold on existing
creases. This shows the twist in
progress from above.
9. The completed twist fold
from above… 10. …and below.
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11. The next few steps make a crease
pattern for another twist fold, equivalent to
the previous one but based on the new
square. With the white side upwards, valley
fold the new diagonals.
12. Make four short valley folds
to mark out another square
directly behind the central
square from step 9.
13. Marked in pen are the valley
folds from steps 11 and 12.
14. With the coloured side up,
crease a diagonal line that
matches the folded edge.
15. Repeat for the other
three sides, to create the
creases shown below.
16. Make another twist fold
from existing creases formed
in steps 11 to 15. In progress.
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17. Completed twist fold. 18. Same, viewed from below.
19. With the coloured side
up, lift up one of the folded
edges.
20. Pull up a folded edge from
underneath and wrap it around to the
front. In the centre, this is essentially
equivalent to a closed sink of the
corner of the central square. Be careful
not to tear the paper here.
21. The wrap completed. 22. Repeat on the other three sides.
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23. With white side up, repeat steps
11 13 on the new, smaller area.
24. Turn over and repeat
steps 14 15.
25. Twist on the creases
formed from steps 23 and 24,
equivalent to step 16. 26. Same, from below.
27. Repeat the wrap from
steps 19 21. 28. The completed wrap
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29. Repeat on other three sides.30. Lift up each of the four ‘arms’
so they are roughly vertical.
31. Carefully unwrap another
layer from inside each arm.
32. At the centre is a small
square. Pinch together its four
corners, similar to forming a
preliminary base.
33. View from the side. Curl one of the
corners back on itself (gentle curve
rather than a sharp crease) and tuck
the pocket at the base of the rose.
With normal paper, this may not stay in
place very well, and you might need to
use a drop of glue (horror!) to hold it in
place. However, it should work fine
with tissue foil or wet folding.
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34. Repeat on the other three corners to complete. Shape to taste. Below are
three views of the completed rose.
Variations on this design are possible by varying the size of the initial
small square and the number of twist folds completed. If the initial
square is 1/9 size rather than 1/8, and you make four twist folds rather
than three, you will get a tighter spiral. However, with larger numbers of
twist folds paper creep makes the folding very difficult.
Thank you to Kerry for helping me with the photos! This is my first
attempt at making any kind of diagrams, so please get in touch if any of
the steps are unclear. I can be found on the origami forum as chris_t.
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Completed model
Details of the head
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Not grafting wersion CP (basic version)
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Full CP (no details of the head)
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CoSID Corner StarDirk Eisner
[email protected]://www.flickr.com/photos/eisfold
This model requires two modules. Each module has two ends (here shown with different colors). One end can befolded independently from the other. One pair of paper sizes is given here. Other paper sizes are possible. Moreinformation can you find after the joining part.
End
A
End
B
Module 1
6 x
End
C
End
D
Module 2
6 x
length x width8.6 cm x 11.7 cm
length x width7.5 cm x 7.5 cm
Attention !! The length is the length of the center line.
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CoSID Corner Star Dirk Eisner
A (p36p36)
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16Inside reverse fold.
17Inside reverse fold.
18Put overlap inside.
19 20
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CoSID Corner Star Dirk Eisner
B (p36f36-36)
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
9Inside reverse fold.
10 11 12Along back pocket.
13 14 15Change existing mountain
fold to valley fold.
16
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CoSID Corner Star Dirk Eisner
C (f36-22.2f22.2-36)
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12
13 14 15
16 17 18 19
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CoSID Corner Star Dirk Eisner
20 21Refold existing back lines
through all layers.
22Refold existing upper line
through all layers.
23Refold existing upper line
through all layers.
24
D (p37.8f37.8-37.8)
1 2 3 4
56
Inside reverse fold.7 8
9Along back pocket.
10 11 12Change existing mountainfold to valley fold.
13
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CoSID Corner Star Dirk Eisner
Joining the modules: Start with two ends B to form a cone. Do the same with two ends D.
p36f36-36 ?p36 is the pocket angle between the pocket opening and center line, here 36◦. f36-36 are two flap angles startingat the center line,here two times 36◦.
Other paper sizes ?The following equations are valid.
pl2 = pl1 ∗ 0.874
pw2 = pw1 ∗ 0.643
op = pl1 − pw1 ∗ 0.688
pl1,pl2: paper length of module 1 resp. 2.pw1,pw2: paper width of module 1 resp. 2.op: opening at the side of the model.If op is 0, then the model is closed. If op is negative, then both ends come together and the folding is notpossible.Choose one length and one width and calculate the other sizes.
⇒
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CoSID Corner Star Dirk Eisner
CoSID Corner Star?The star is two times the corner of the Compound of Stellated Icosahedron and Dodecahedron.
You can fold the whole compound with the following modules:
module 1: 30x A+Amodule 2: 60x C+(D without step 12)
Use the previous paper sizes.
Happy folding !!
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Doris Lauinger
Kleines Geschenktäschchen / Gift Bag
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Franz Rogar – Fugu
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Flag of Denmark Gilad Aharoni (Israel / IA) 2010
1. Mark center of left edge witha small crease.
SimpleA 15cm (6 inch) square makes a 7.5cm (3 inch) wide model.
c
2. Bring top-right corner to left crease,crasing only on the bottom-right.
3. Bring bottom-left corner to centercrease, pinch only on the right side.
4. Bring bottom-left corner to touch top edge.The crease starts at the last pinch on the right.Crease only on the right side.
5. Valley-fold and unfold throughthe intersection.
6. Valley-fold.
7. Fold and unfold, creasing nearthe edges.
8. Valley-folds. 9. Fold and unfold, creasing nearthe edge.
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Visit WWW.GILADORIGAMI.COM for more!
Flag of Denmark (page 2)
10. Valley-fold. 11. Three mountain-folds, usingexisting creases as guides.
13. Valley-fold, tucking flapinto pocket.
12. Turn over.
14. Turn over.
Flag of Denmark
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Wurzel2Papier-DreieckedelsteinIdee, Design: Hans-Werner Guth 2011-11,
Falter: Hans-Werner Guth
Crease Pattern (CP) bzw. Faltmuster für den Dreieckedelstein; Papier: 2-Format (hier: DIN-A6);
Pünktchen = Bergfalten; gestrichelt = Talfalten
01Erste Faltung: Lange Seite halbieren …
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02Zur Hälfte gefaltet …
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03Pinchmark dezent anfalten (Viertelmarke) und untere rechte Ecke zum Pinch hochfalten, so daß die Falte durch die linke untere Ecke verläuft.
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04Nochmals einschlagen bis zur linken Papierseite. Das Selbe nun auf der Rückseite!
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05Rückseite auch erledigt! Beachte: Kleine Einkerbung rechts.
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06Unten und oben nochmal umfalten bis zu den letzten Faltlinien.Dann alle restlichen CP-Linien durchfalten und wieder öffnen.
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07Auf der linken Seite bis zum Kreuzungs- punkt (und nicht weiter) winkelhalbiert einfalten - zum Betrachter hin …
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08von der anderen Seite aus gesehen …
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09nach Vorfaltung aller CP-Linien und Nebeneinaderlegen oder -halten ergeben sich verschiedene Möglichkeiten - hier die Innenansicht eines zukünftigen Edelsteines …
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10Mal schauen, was so möglich ist: Wo die Taschen und die Laschen sind.
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11 Zwei Module lassen sich zum Beispiel ineinanderschieben …
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12Wenn man die drei Module ineinanderschiebt, 'sieht' man den möglichen Edelstein schon(?)!
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13Blick von 'unten': Das kleine Dreieck im Zentrum ist die Bodenfläche, die Trapeze im Ring drumherum sind der erste untere Kranz, die drei gleichseitigen Dreiecke außen bilden die Edelsteinspitze, die überstehenden Klappen sind 'Verbinder'.
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14Blick von unten unter den geöffneten Edelstein …
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15Blick von oben …
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16Blick von außen, zu 98% zusammengesteckt …
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17Blick auf den umgeworfenen Stein …
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18Wackelhand …
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19fast fertig …
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20so gut wie fertig …
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21fertig …
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22von oben noch leicht geöffnet
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23... auf der Seite liegend …
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24andere Zusammensetzungsmethode (a) …
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25andere Zusammensetzungsmethode (b) …
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26andere Zusammensetzungsmethode (c)
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Jacob Rossman – Aguman
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Joseph Organtini – Narwhal
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Klaus Dieter
Ennen
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FlowerMasalimova Liana, 9 years, Eniseysk, Russia
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Ma Yong Roast Chicken
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RatKalistratova Marie, 11 years, city Eniseysk, Russia
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Echo DishMichael Weinstein
2010
1. Blintz fold. 2. Crease down the middle
both ways.
3. Make another pinch half-
way between the edge and
your first pinch.
4. And one more time, then
turn over.
5. Line up the outermost two
creases, and crease hard.
6. Crease similarly three
more times.
7. Fold one edge over. 8. Rotate the corner to the
left with valley and mountain
folds.
9. Crease well, and unfold. Note
the crease that lines up with the
folded edge. If that crease isn’t on
that edge, you haven’t done it right.
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10. Repeat steps 7, 8 and 9 on
the other corners.
11. Fold in an edge. 12. Pull out a corner.
13. Valley fold the corner. 14. Valley fold the edge
following the crease below.
15. Valley fold the other
edge similarly.
17. Repeat steps 11-16 on
the other three corners.16. Fold the corner back
behind and repeat steps
12-15 on the other three.
18. Pull out the corners.
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19. Make the dish 3
dimensional by reverse
folding in and out.
20. Your dish should look something
like this from the inside. Continue
reserve folding in and out on the
rest of the creases.
21. Mountain fold the corners
behind the other layers to lock
the sides together.
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21
3
4
5
6
7
89
10
11
envelope with horseauthor : Soukharevsky Olga, Poltava , Ukraine , [email protected]
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TalonHalyapin Pavel, 12 years , Eniseysk, Russia
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Models and CP by
Sanja Srbljinovic Cucek
2011
BOWL, BAG OR A BOAT?
Depends on the length of the rectangle you start with.
A triangular grid may help.
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