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This here is a rose that I partially designed. The flower itself takes one square of paper and was design by Kawasaki, a REALLY famous origami folder. ("the father of origami") I designed the stem myself, although the design needs improvement, its functional for now.
This here is a modular star that takes 30 pieces of paper to make. Every five pooints creates a star pattern between them. I believe there are 20 points on this model.
Voila! the magic rose cube turns into a rose! How awesome.
This here is a picture of the magic rose cube, and amazing little modular piece that takes 6 sqaures of paper. Give you 3 guesses to why it's called the magic rose cube.
After making my first buckyball I tried to make another one using two colors to create a pattern. This one truned out somewhat random, but I still like the color scheme so I'll show it off.
Another Japanese Brocade. Why do I have so many pictures of these?
After a while I tried to use the unit to make a buckyball and see if I could make any other shapes with it. The result is this little dodecahedra, made from 30 squares of paper.
A kusudama is basically this ornamental ball that has stars all over it. If I remember right it has 10 stars on it.
This is the first buckball I ever made. It takes 90 squares of paper. The units are actually really easy to fold.
Pure Insanity. Five intersecting tetrahedra skeletons using 30 pieces of paper that I will never fold again. This model took me a full day to fold and it's not even holding all that well. Never again.
Just to show how small these two brocades are, I put a quarter in the picture to give you a size reference. Basically what happened here was I tried to make a pair of earrings with these as a gift to somebody, but I coudln't make the hooks. If anyone wants them and has something to attach them to their ears with, contact me.
Here's a picture of a few of Japanese brocades, each uses six pieces of paper.
Welcome to the Modular Origami gallery. To look around, just roll the mouse over the thumbnail of the image you want to see. All of the models in here took at at least 2 or more pieces of paper to make, hence, the modular title of this gallery.
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