Thursday, March 12, 2009

Comic Relief

It's Comic Relief, also known as Red Nose day today in the UK, People all over Britain do silly things for Charity. I've folded some noses and am going to sell them at work.

The big one at the top is Jeremy Shafer's Clown Nose, diagrams available on his website at http://www.barf.cc/ It's a Stellated Octahedron and in fact a clever open backed variation of the Water Bomb.

The one being modelled by my mask is a False Nose and Moustache by Gabriel Alvarez, diagrams to be found in Paul Jackson's The Complete Origami Course

And the Pinocchio Nose is by Kunihiko Kasahara from his excellent Origami Omnibus.


Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Robert Harbin's Origami 4


I've finally found a copy of this very rare book!

I bought volumes 1 to 3 as soon as they were published. Number 4 came out in 1977, but by that time I had moved to France and wasn't aware of it. It couldn't have been in print for very long because so few copies have survived.

Like the others, it is a compilation by Robert Harbin of some of the best designs around at the time. It includes some highly original designs by leading folders such as: Martin Wall, Max Hulme, Dave Brill, Patricia Crawford and Neal Elias. Some of my favorites are Patricia Crawford's grand piano, Martin Wall's rose complete with stem and leaves and Neal Elias' fantastic series of Buddhas.

I successfully bid for the book on Ebay and it should arrive today...When it does I can delete the pdf version of the book I downloaded 2 years ago: I was a bit naive then and didn't realise it was an illegal copy until I posted a mail about it on the British Origami Society message board. The BOS own the copyright to this and all Robert Harbin's Origami books, so you can imagine the reaction!

Monday, January 12, 2009

Mask

Looking through a box of my old folds the other day, I found my first design:

I was quite pleased with it at the time. Looking at it again now, and being much more objective, I can see that the eyes look completely wrong: they stick up over the top of the head. Why didn't I see that before!...So I fiddled with the top of the model and came up with this:

Much more satisfactory... and simpler to fold too. Plus, by shaping the eyes individually, there is scope to alter the expression remembering what Eric Joisel says about symmetrical masks looking "dead".
It's folded from a modified fish base. I diagrammed my first version and am now working on the diagrams for this one. I'm looking forward to uploading these and more of my designs soon.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Bob Neale's 'Bunny Bill'

Bob Neale's Bunny BillBob Neale's Bunny Bill

As a child, I used to watch a tv program called "Vision On" Vision On mascot
presented by Tony Hart. They showed all sorts of art techniques for children and had an origami slot where a model was folded by anonymous hands in speeded up motion.
One day I saw these hands fold in a matter of seconds a top hat from a white piece of paper. then the hand did something to the hat and a rabbit popped out of the top!
I wanted to know how to fold it of course. I wrote to the program but never received an answer. This was before the age of the Internet and interactive television. I remember searching the library and saving my pocket money to buy Robert Harbin's paperback origami books always hoping to find the model.
I kept the books over the years but stopped folding until about 5 years ago when my mother bought me a copy of Samuel Randlett's "The Best of Origami" from a charity shop. This restarted my interest in paper folding and I remembered the fold I had seen all those years ago.
I started searching the Internet, putting 'hat' and 'rabbit' into search engines. Eventually I found a reference to 'bunny bill' clicked on the link and there was a photo of the lost model made out of a dollar bill!
I joined the British Origami Society shortly after that and saw how many people were designing models. For some reason it had never occurred to me that this was possible... I went back to the picture, and studied it closely: I worked out that the rabbit's ears and the head were made from the raw edges of one of the short sides. I tried to reverse engineer the model from the photo but got very stuck very quickly... Eventually after requesting the model from the BOS library, it was emailed to me in a pdf file: 8 pages of Origami heaven.
What a brilliant organisation, they are all so knowledgeable, helpful and friendly.
The fold is apparently very popular with magicians who keep the diagrams a closely guarded secret because from what I can gather they are only to be found in one booklet, which only contains this 1 fold.
I was looking forward to meeting Bob Neale and thanking him for sparking my interest in Origami, at the recent BOS Cambridge convention, but sadly he wasn't able to attend.
He has created hundreds of models including an elephant and the classic magic star.
There is another reason for me liking this model: although I couldn't reverse engineer it from the photographs, I was able to create an "Abyssinian cat" in which the head is also folded from the short edge of a 2:1 rectangle:

Matthew Hayward's Abyssinian cat

Saturday, May 3, 2008

Folding by request

This week, I've been asked by some work colleagues to fold a Shi tzu dog, a car and a duck!
The dog was easy as I had just been reading Leyla Torres blog http://thebraid.wordpress.com/ about Paul Jackson's Barking Dog model which showed an attractively folded example and a link to a video by the man himself showing how to fold it.
For the car I dug out an example of Herman van Goubergen's toy car which I had folded a few months ago. Fortunately it was in canary yellow paper, just like my work colleague's car!
For those of you that don't know this model, it is a true original: when finished, you pop a couple of marbles under the bonnet in an integral engine compartment, place the model on a tray and the car moves when the tray is tilted with lifelike smoothness. You can find the diagrams on Alex Barber's site http://www.origami.com/ and here is Herman demonstrating his model at the BOS convention in Cambridge last year:





For the duck, I'm still on the lookout, maybe a Montroll or a Kasahara.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Fiore II

My fold of the week is Riccardo Colletto's Fiore II. It looks stunning and has all the components of the very best origami:
  • I has a very fluid, rhythmical folding sequence.


  • It has no RAT (right about there) folds, every one has a reference point.


  • The model is bicoloured, so can have simple elegance or outright colour clashing blousiness


  • It is beautifully simple to fold, in effect a blintzed preliminary (square) base with reversed corners.


  • It has a dramatic finish: from a 2 dimensional easily transportable 'helmet' shape it is pushed inside out and transformed into a fully formed 3D, flower, unlike any origami flower you've ever seen before. 10 out of 10 for WOW factor.


  • When formed, the model has tension. It holds itself together and it's my guess that it would look good for months even in a damp bathroom or on a window sill.

You can find the diagrams on Nicolas Thierry's exhaustive Passion Origami site: http://design.origami.free.fr/

My first post!

The purpose of this new blog is to allow me to record my thoughts on origami, catalogue my ever changing favorite folds and show my modest creations off to the world.
I hope also to encourage other paper folders in my area to share their interest and maybe, who knows, even start some local meetings.