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  2. Origami paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origami_paper

    Origami paper and a traditional origami crane. Origami paper is the paper used for origami, the art of Japanese paper folding.The only real requirement of the folding medium is that it must be able to hold a crease, but should ideally also be thinner than regular paper for convenience when multiple folds over the same small paper area are required (e.g. such as would be the case if creating an ...

  3. Origami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origami

    Origami (折り紙, Japanese pronunciation: or [oɾiꜜɡami], from ori meaning "folding", and kami meaning "paper" (kami changes to gami due to rendaku)) is the Japanese art of paper folding. In modern usage, the word "origami" is often used as an inclusive term for all folding practices, regardless of their culture of origin.

  4. Miura fold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miura_fold

    Crease pattern for a Miura fold. The parallelograms of this example have 84° and 96° angles. Animation of the folding and unfolding of a Miura-creased material. The Miura fold (ミウラ折り, Miura-ori) is a method of folding a flat surface such as a sheet of paper into

  5. Yoshizawa–Randlett system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshizawa–Randlett_system

    The two main types of origami symbol are lines and arrows [2] — arrows show how origami paper is bent or moved, while lines show various types of edges: A thick line shows the edge of the paper; A dashed line shows a valley fold. The paper is folded in front of itself.

  6. Kawasaki's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kawasaki's_theorem

    For rigid origami (a type of folding that keeps the surface flat except at its folds, suitable for hinged panels of rigid material rather than flexible paper), the condition of Kawasaki's theorem turns out to be sufficient for a single-vertex crease pattern to move from an unfolded state to a flat-folded state.

  7. Mathematics of paper folding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematics_of_paper_folding

    The placement of a point on a curved fold in the pattern may require the solution of elliptic integrals. Curved origami allows the paper to form developable surfaces that are not flat. [41] Wet-folding origami is a technique evolved by Yoshizawa that allows curved folds to create an even greater range of shapes of higher order complexity.