Submitted by Sara on 25 July 2010 - 11:04am
Designer:
Folder:
Adams, Sara
Difficulty Level:
Simple
Model type:
12 units
Geometry
Modular
Paper ratio:
Square
Paper: 12 sheets of 8.2cm squares , 300gsm
Model: Diameter of 9cm
Paper: 12 sheets of 8.2cm squares , 300gsm
Model: Diameter of 9cm
Comments
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 25 July 2010 - 5:58pm Permalink
More units
Could you use more peices of paper to make a larger model? Or would that not work?
Submitted by Hans-Werner Guth (not verified) on 25 July 2010 - 7:40pm Permalink
More Modules to build Jump objects
It's definitly possible! At the 'Origami Deutschland 2010' convention a folder showed me the jump object as truncated cube object. As far as i remeber he used 24 two piece moduls. He used heavy weight transparent x-ray foil. I was really surprised, so i did not make a photo nor i rember the name of this folder
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 25 July 2010 - 10:10pm Permalink
Sara i folded this with tant
Sara i folded this with tant paper and it's quite stable so printer paper would probably do but i'm very sure because as you know tant has totally another quality
Submitted by Sara on 26 July 2010 - 7:40am Permalink
Printer paper vs tant
Hm, tant is very strong paper, I'd be quite reluctant to compare it to printer paper. :) However, you are right, maybe it does work well with printer paper. I don't think it will have the same finish, though.
-- Sara
Submitted by aurora (not verified) on 26 July 2010 - 10:44am Permalink
jump model
Hi Sara i folded the jump model with normal, thin white-face origami paper and that worket reallly well. By the way i really like the model i have aldready folded 3 of it! :)
Submitted by Cheryl Lee (not verified) on 26 July 2010 - 3:13pm Permalink
Hello Sara Would it be okay
Hello Sara
Would it be okay if I used 160 gsm paper?
Submitted by Sara on 26 July 2010 - 3:45pm Permalink
Sure
Yes, I'd say anything from 150gsm should be ok. If you check http://www.happyfold... you'll notice I actually folded a model from 80gsm paper in combination with 170gsm paper. I personally prefer the model folded from heavier paper than that, but if you use 160gsm for all modules, that will already be heavier than what I used for that particular rendition. :)
-- Sara
Submitted by Cheryl Lee (not verified) on 28 July 2010 - 11:04am Permalink
Thanks!
Thanks a lot for the great tutorial and explanation, Sara. I managed to finish this before my father's birthday. :)
Submitted by Sara on 28 July 2010 - 6:56pm Permalink
Cool
Great to hear this. Hope he liked it!
-- Sara
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 28 July 2010 - 6:31pm Permalink
do you think it would be
do you think it would be possible to make small ones out of business cards or r business cards 2 thick?
Submitted by Sara on 28 July 2010 - 6:55pm Permalink
Give it a try
The best answer I can give, and probably my most common answer I give to the questions I get asked is:
Just give it a try. Probably just making one module or unit will be enough to judge whether it's doable, or at least worth making 6 units.
Also, the paper used for business cards can differ by quite a lot, so it'd be a difficult question to answer in any case.
-- Sara
Submitted by Rancon (not verified) on 28 July 2010 - 9:59pm Permalink
Design by Sara
Why can't you design a model and make a video of it
Submitted by Sara on 29 July 2010 - 2:31pm Permalink
Own designs
I have designed a model, but haven't made a video on it. Why? Well, one reason is that others have designed much better models than me. :)
However, I do plan to make a video on how to fold my eagle. I'm just not sure when yet.
-- Sara
Submitted by Jean-Baptiste (not verified) on 2 August 2010 - 10:32am Permalink
copy paper is fine
Hi Sara, and thanks for all your videos.
I folded this model from copy paper only (80gsm), with 5x5cm squares. It is very sturdy so I think there is no need for a thicker paper if you want a small model. However I am not sure whether it will be strong enough it I start with larger squares.
Keep on folding :)
JB
Submitted by Sara on 2 August 2010 - 12:00pm Permalink
Weight and paper size
Thanks for the feedback. Yes, the smaller the modules you make, the less heavy the paper can be. It's always a balance between weight and size. :)
Also, through this message I got aware of your Flickr page. I'll have to give that a try. Any paper recommendations there?
-- Sara
Submitted by Jean-Baptiste (not verified) on 3 August 2010 - 4:05pm Permalink
Not really, almost all the
Not really, almost all the models on my Flickr page were folded from copy paper :)
Submitted by Sergey Filatov (not verified) on 5 August 2010 - 11:07am Permalink
Thanks
Dear Sara,
thanks a lot for your site and this video in particular.
Here is my work from copy paper. http://picasaweb.goo...
Submitted by Sara on 5 August 2010 - 11:21am Permalink
Well done
That's a very good rendition, especially given that you used normal copy paper! Most other attempts I've seen from copy paper didn't have as clean curved folds as you did. :)
-- Sara
Submitted by mike (not verified) on 9 August 2010 - 10:37pm Permalink
!!!!!
12 SHEETS!!!!!!! I don't have that!
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 28 August 2010 - 9:59am Permalink
So?
That's not a lot. I've folded models with 32.
Submitted by Origami Guy (not verified) on 15 October 2010 - 2:06am Permalink
UM... ok...
how... did... that... turn... out...?
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 22 September 2011 - 2:33pm Permalink
?
I made a model with 36 at a young age of 13....
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 5 January 2013 - 3:59pm Permalink
My god! I love what you do.
My god! I love what you do. You help the world discover origami! I am a huge fan of yours and absolutely love origami!
Thank you for taking your time and making all these videos.
Submitted by Amynnde10 (not verified) on 6 December 2013 - 8:48am Permalink
The video to make Jump was
The video to make Jump was pretty nice to watch. The process seemed a little easy to me but the measurements need to exact to get the correct shape. I would love to try this at home. The creativity deserves appreciation. Thanks.
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