top | item 29604560

An Origami Samurai Made from a Single Sheet of Rice Paper

264 points| simonebrunozzi | 4 years ago |openculture.com

23 comments

order
[+] hokumguru|4 years ago|reply
For those in the bay area, there is a great origami store in japan town called the paper tree which I highly recommend. Last time I was there they had some truly amazing pieces on display including many of Lang's insects and sculptures as well as a ryujin 3.5 designed by satoshi kamiya.
[+] dmayle|4 years ago|reply
You've hit upon some of my favorite pieces. Any of Lang's opus pieces are amazing (I really like the rock climber that sticks out of a piece of paper).

Satoshi Kamiya's works are also pretty darn amazing (the wizard, the dragons, etc.).

Lang really brought out the science in origami (he's en ex-rocket scientist turned origami pro), and wrote software for calculating the fold patterns and extraction points from paper for pulling out points of manipulation (like limbs, etc.)

[+] johnnyApplePRNG|4 years ago|reply
I am currently studying 3D computer graphics.

Interesting (to me) that if you pause the video at 38 seconds you see a mesh of triangles... which are the same building blocks the computer uses to create 3d objects as well.

[+] peter303|4 years ago|reply
Prof Erik Demaine of MIT pioneers the field of computational origami. I do not know the details of his research. But there are practical applications like fitting large space probes into narrow rockets. Or making machines that flex without explicit hinges.
[+] gibolt|4 years ago|reply
This is incredible!

The steps this craft has taken to evolve over time would be so interesting to watch *cough* unfold.

Start with basic shapes. Then work towards branching element. Later form that into body shapes. Make the detail start forming from the rough structure. Continuously refine from there. It feels like watching a lifeform or fractal grow in realtime.

[+] marricks|4 years ago|reply
It looks more like moulding clay than origami folding I remember form a kid. Part way through you can see the basic form take shape and get pressed down into the samurai. Cool stuff!
[+] Agingcoder|4 years ago|reply
This is humbling.

While from a purely technical standpoint I fully understand it's doable, the dedication and skill required is, well, rather striking.

[+] ipsin|4 years ago|reply
How does one design such a thing? Is it software or "on paper" or with piecewise prototyping?
[+] thealig|4 years ago|reply
I think its a combination of software and prototyping from what I've read about origami artists. (software like Treemaker [0] for making crease patterns etc)

(Not an expert though)

[+] chmod600|4 years ago|reply
Oragami is amazing, in part, because it's a reversible process unlike painting or sculpture. There's a certain beauty to purely non-destructive creation.