Paper: 22.7cm square of Pacon paper
Model: 9.8cm square
Someone contacted me asking how to tile the hydrangea, as seen on http://www.flickr.co...
I decided to give it a go and managed to work out how this could be done. Admittedly, my first attempt failed, but the second one worked out. Later I found a comprehensive description of the technique written by Peter Budai. He calls this tiling "high density", and also gives instructions for low and middle density.
The basic technique for high density tiling is as follows, and is the text I wrote back to the person that asked in the first place. It somewhat summarizes what Peter Budai nicely diagrams.
Essentially, you want to fold 4 hydrangeas on a square. Each hydrangea will use 4/7th of the square. So adjoining hydrangeas will share 1/4th in the middle. This is why in the middle of the completed model the outermost petals are "missing". Hence the folding sequence is as follows:
- Make a 7 by 7 grid on a square.
- Make the necessary precreasings for hydrangea on each of the corners, assuming a square consisting of 4/7 by 4/7.
- Collapse all four hydrangeas at the same time (go through them one by one, making them partially 3D, then collapse - a bit trickier than doing a single one).
- Work on each hydrangea tile individually, just like you only had one hydrangea on a square. The steps are identical from here on.
Comments
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 14 October 2009 - 12:31am Permalink
7ths
How do you divide into 7ths?
Thanks:)
Submitted by Sara on 14 October 2009 - 12:43am Permalink
Stephen O'Hanlon says this is the way to go...
For example, try the method described here: http://www.fishgoth....
-- Sara
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 15 October 2009 - 8:36pm Permalink
Thanks:)
Thanks:)
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 27 October 2009 - 1:21am Permalink
HOW?
Hello Sara... I was just wondering... If the method shows how to divide into thirds, then how do you divide into 7ths? I am a bit confused... THANKS! =D
Submitted by Sara on 27 October 2009 - 5:42am Permalink
Look on the 3rd page
Ah, the document has 3 pages. On the third page, it's shown how to do 7ths.
-- Sara
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 30 October 2009 - 2:32am Permalink
OHH!
Oh. okay.. Thanks!
Submitted by Haligami (not verified) on 23 November 2010 - 9:47am Permalink
divide into 7ths
It's very simple :) Divide into 8 and cut one row and column. Paper is clear without "bad" creases.
Submitted by Josh (not verified) on 23 April 2015 - 3:29pm Permalink
Devide into 8ths, then cut
Devide into 8ths, then cut one strip of two of the sides :)
Submitted by Aarushi (not verified) on 23 August 2017 - 10:11am Permalink
Division of 7*7 grid
I use two methods:
1. Either divide the sheet into an 8*8 grid and cut out 1*1 from two adjacent sides
2. or, use a ruler to divide the sheet into 7 equal parts
You can use the folding method, but I just find these two easier.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 14 October 2009 - 7:27am Permalink
similar model
A few weeks ago I was experimenting with 90 degree intersections and cross box pleats and got a result that looked like a level one hydrangea, without the flaps you have to fold under each level. With a little tweaking it now looks like a cross with a lotus-like flower in the center.
-Daniel
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 17 October 2009 - 2:29am Permalink
center
i made this too ,its reely nice:)
in the center, did you end up that you could fold another hydrangea too?
i did but i didnt i might the next time, anyhoo thanks for the instructions on it:)
dan keogh
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 17 October 2009 - 2:34am Permalink
:)
sorry a bit of that last comment made no sense:)
i meant: i did get a possible hydrangea in the middle that i didnt fold, but will the next time:)
anyhoo thanks for the instructions!
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 19 December 2009 - 11:23pm Permalink
Can You please Make A Video Sara ?
Sara,
Can you please make an instructional video showing how to fold this model ? I really enjoyed folding the original Hydrangea I would absolutely love to make this beautiful work of art !
Submitted by Sara on 20 December 2009 - 8:07am Permalink
Diagrams available
I'm not sure yet, maybe. But if you want to give it a try, check Peter Budai's diagrams: http://dev.origami.c...
Funnily enough, I figured out how to make this pattern before I found these diagrams. They make life much easier (as in you don't have to think as much - although I often find that's the fun bit).
-- Sara
Submitted by Origami Fan (not verified) on 21 March 2011 - 1:52pm Permalink
Broken!
Sara, I can't access the link. Fix it!
Submitted by Sara on 22 March 2011 - 5:54am Permalink
Followup
I've contacted Alex to make him aware of it. The link is generally correct, but it seems there's a problem with the database that Alex is using.
-- Sara
Submitted by Crane (not verified) on 30 March 2011 - 7:52pm Permalink
I have just folded a high
I have just folded a high density Hydrangea, but I added a fifth flower in the middle. You just need to squash the central square behind the model as usual and then go on. If you're familiar enough with the model, it will fold almost by itself.
Submitted by Christophe Floutier (not verified) on 4 December 2013 - 5:28pm Permalink
Thanks for the idea, I've
Thanks for the idea,
I've tried the 2x2 high density with a center flower, it's working pretty well.
you just need to way for the second stage of flower making to free the center stage
on this picture i've made 3 stages with a 4x4 high density
https://www.dropbox....
The paper is quite not good (A3 plain sheet paper)
But it works really well
I'm about to create a 3x3 on the same principle
but it's so long
I've not created the first flower stage.
Front :
https://www.dropbox....
https://www.dropbox....
back :
Submitted by Deshna (not verified) on 18 November 2012 - 2:34pm Permalink
It's here!!
http://dev.origami.o...
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