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Origami?

TickTockMan

"Repent, Harlequin!"
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Anyone here into origami?


I have never did it, but I do like to watch others make things.
 
I started doing origami back in my university days in the early 70s. There wasn't the internet back then, but the craft stores had instruction and pattern books. Now it's all available online. After you learn the few basic folds, you can get as easy or as advanced as you want.

I can't do it anymore. My hands shake too much.

You must have seen this game when you were a kid. It's very basic and very easy origami:

 
Yeah, we called them cootie catchers in my school.

Of course, anytime I hear Origami, I always go back 20 years to Jackie Chan Adventures:

 
I started doing origami back in my university days in the early 70s. There wasn't the internet back then, but the craft stores had instruction and pattern books. Now it's all available online. After you learn the few basic folds, you can get as easy or as advanced as you want.

I can't do it anymore. My hands shake too much.

You must have seen this game when you were a kid. It's very basic and very easy origami:



Every kid I knew when I was a kid made those.
 
Only recently--after my trip last autumn to Japan--have I become interested in origami. Its origins are lost in time, but it is thought to have come to Japan with the introduction of paper from China in the first millenium, and was first used in religious ceremonies. I saw origami festoons in Buddhist temples I visited. Two origami cranes greeted my partner and I when we arrived at our hotel in Kyoto. He now has them on his desk at home. Brightly colored metal "origami" cranes were used as chopstick holders on our Japan Airlines flight, and I've since discovered the distinctive origami crane image used in woodblock prints and in fabric design.


The Romanian artist Christian Marianciuc does the most beautiful and intricate paper cranes:

 
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