Austin, Texas. Vintage comics at a shop, a portrait at a bar, and a quiet moment on a leather booth. Three stops, two lenses, one city.
November 2019
Austin, TX
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM3
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal length: 35.0mm
Aperture: f/2.8
ISO: 3200
Austin, Texas. Vintage comics at a shop, a portrait at a bar, and a quiet moment on a leather booth. Three stops, two lenses, one city.
November 2019
Austin, TX
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM3
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal length: 35.0mm
Aperture: f/2.8
ISO: 3200
While the more in depth information that I've been posting here isn't part of this video, you can see more of the motion.
If you want to see this in person and are in New York City: SATURDAY (May 6) 3-9pm ET at The Arm letterpress shop in Brooklyn.
It is an exhibition of work from our paper engineering class and an exploration of new interactive forms. The projects are from an amazingly brilliant group of people.
Also: snacks & drinks
P11: Knife Pleats
It is all straight lines, why do the knife pleats bow out of the page?
This one isn't my favorite but the curve is interesting.
P10: Pleat Spiral
This is another pleat spiral like the last but with a lower angle between the horizontal mountains and the diagonal valleys so the twist happens more slowly.
This is the basis of the fold I use to make snails.
P9: Pleat Spiral
Another cylinder rising into a spiral. However, the crease patterns for this is much simpler.
If want to try textural fold, this is the one. You don't need to be very exact: horizontal lines as mountains, connecting diagonals (all angled the same way) as valleys.
While these are well-known, I was introduced to them by origami artist Tomoko Fuse who uses this type of pattern to create nautilus shells.
P8: Yoshimura coil, a=10
This is another Yoshimura pattern. Instead of a rectangle, this one starts as a parallelogram before it is folded.
The result is a flat cylinder that stretches into a helix.
(This one is my favorite, don’t tell the others.)
P7: Yoshimura, a= 30
Nicknamed "The Chomper" by @stoneymonster.
This is another Yoshimura pattern. The lower angle between vertical and diagonal lines means it doesn't fold over on itself as quickly as the previous one leaving an opening to see the bellows-like interior.
P6: Yoshimura, a= 45 with verso
When folded in this pattern, flat papers want to curl up, the higher the angle, the more they want to curl. While my edges here are straight (the paper is rectangular), putting a zigzag cut on the edges is a great way to create teeth that open as the page opens.
Alternatively, if edges overlapped, they could be glued together to make a compressible polygonal tube.
P4: Waterbomb pattern
Waterbomb is a classic origami pattern that, with a puff of breath, creates a little box (that can be filled with water or air or jellybeans).
This tessellation pattern is made up of connecting waterbomb bases.
Similar to the Miura-ori, this folds down compactly and has points that zigzag. But the crease patterns are different: the waterbomb is always 45 degree diagonal folds (for rigid flat foldable).