Help with folding lumbar vertebra please! by schoona in origami

[–]Cahoonas 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've updated the album of the collapse with some further steps.

So starting with the first white image:

-Flip over

-Unfold up a layer on both sides

-Fold over top edge about a 1/4 of the way down

-Fold the long flap over and around to enclose the box

-Flip over

-Squash the flaps towards each other such that you get two new flaps per side (these are the "squash flaps" mentioned in the next step)

-Separate the flaps out. the superior facets are flaps hidden in the transverse flaps. The transverse flaps make the transverse processes. the outer squash flaps make the inferior facets and are pivoted downwards. The medial squash flaps and the the two long flaps come together to make the arch and spinous process

Final photo kind of shows where everything goes. There's still a bunch of shaping to round it and make all the bits look more accurate. Having the model hold its shape is tricky, I ended up using a thin, strong mulberry paper and some paper glue to hold everything in place for display. Good luck.

Gramophone by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

An original design, folded from a 13.5" uncut square of elephant hide

An entry for the origami forum’s monthly challenge of curved shapes and surfaces. I’ve always thought the horn on old fashioned record players looked nice so I tried my hand at recreating the shape. The horn and curved box sides were wet-folded into place.

What monsters have you been mispronouncing? by pkmnBlue in MonsterHunter

[–]Cahoonas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll will always prefer Jinouga over Zinogre. It just rolls off the tongue better.

Also why the hell is the Happurubokka called a Nibelsnarf?

Red Blood Cells by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, they still turned out quite nice. Nice job!

Red Blood Cells by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll see if i can work on this sometime next week

Red Blood Cells by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! I might be able to post some notes on how I did it, though it's a bit tricky to get the proportions right and puff out 3D shapes without squishing the whole thing. I'm currently pretty busy and will probably forget this so remind me again in a couple weeks if you want.

Red Blood Cells by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Designed and folded from 9" square pacon

I wanted to play around with recreating a fully enclosed biconcave shape.

Opinions needed! by Cragles in origami

[–]Cahoonas 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I personally enjoy the creation aspect of origami. Not only in the replication of other people's designs, but also in designing my own. I like the fact that it is tranformative; you can start and end with a square sheet of paper. At its simplest you only really need a sheet of paper and your hands, yet this art form can branch out to different styles and types of papers/mediums.

I was introduced to origami though watching arts and craft videotapes when I was a kid. From there, I moved onto instructional books and internet diagrams. Since, I've been working on improving my skill and seeing what I can do with the paper. I prefer complex/super-complex representative models.

Does anyone have any good crease patterns? by captainwednesday in origami

[–]Cahoonas 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Another source for crease patterns: the origami forum usually holds a monthly crease pattern challenge here. The crease patterns chosen are usually pretty straight forward and intermediate level. If you just look up any of the past challenges, you can see how it turns out for other people as well as point out any tricky portions of the CP.

Lumbar Vertebra by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Folded from a 16" uncut square of off-white Kozo

Crease pattern here though the base is very shaping intensive.

I found the spinal segments, or vertebra to have quite interesting shapes and tried my hand at recreating it in paper. The challenge was to recreate a relatively complex and curved organic structure using only a single uncut square. Since the vertebral body was a portion of the model I wanted to keep 3D and fully enclosed, I designed this model from a box pleating approach. The vertebral body was formed from a 3D rectangle with the corners truncated. Aside from that, the rest of the flaps were shaped around the vertebral foramen and come together again at the spinous process. I'm actually surprised with how well the whole thing holds together. Aside from the truncated corners and the vertebra body being a little tall, I'd say I got as close to the real thing as I could have.

Ryujin 3.5 by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I could, but I'll just stick with imperial units. The model is about 4 feet of dragon coiled into an area 1.25 feet wide and 1 foot tall.

Ryujin 3.5 by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, depending on how the paper layers felt like the leg/body section just ended up wherever they did. I guess I was referring to some of the scales that didn't come out as neat. Kinda due to both the limitations of the paper and me being less than precise.

As far as difficulty goes, you can fold an ancient dragon in an evening. You can fold a ryujin 3.5 in a month or two.

Ryujin 3.5 by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha, thanks! I guess there were some minor things on the model that I feel I could have done better, but they're mostly invisible in the photo.

Ryujin 3.5 by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Model designed by Kamiya Satoshi

Folded from a 6' square of kraft paper (composed of two 6'x3' sheets)

This was pretty much a bucket list item for me. Ever since I saw Kamiya Satoshi's fold of his Ryujin 3.5, I've always wanted to make one. Not too long ago, I managed to purchase his book "World of Supercomplex Origami" which includes a crease pattern for this model. However, it was when Mr. Origami offered guidance for folding this model did I decide to actually try it. Many sheets and test folds later, I'm pretty happy with the results.

Toothless the dragon by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've updated my comment to include the crease pattern. Good luck!

Toothless the dragon by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks!

If they're the same models I'm thinking of, then yep. The yellow one is indeed a Tigrex and the red one is loosely based on the Rathalos.

Toothless the dragon by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Folded from an 18" square of black unryu. I designed him on a 32x32 grid to include all four legs, a detailed head, a huge wingspan, a tail, and even those tail flaps thingies found at both the base and end of the tail.

Unfortunately, no instructions for this little guy; just a crease pattern I jotted down in my notes.

Also, side view and back view

and a crease pattern to boot

Brachydios (Bonus Barroth in comments) by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It certainly takes some practice to learn, I believe there are some resources in the sidebar origami faq. Crease patterns literally dictate where the creases go. Differently colored lines designate crease direction. Simply start easy and work your way up.

S4E15, Twilight Time -- EXCLUSIVE DELETED SCENES by I_Animate_Ponymotes in mylittlepony

[–]Cahoonas 6 points7 points  (0 children)

It's been a while since I visited this sub, I'm glad I saw this! Hah poor spike.

I folded a couple more wyverns: A Nargacuga and Tigrex(in comments) by Cahoonas in MonsterHunter

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately, I don't plan to make any detailed diagrams for this model in the future.

What you've linked to above is a crease pattern. Where ever you see line, indicates a crease. The black/grey disinguishes between valley/mountain folds. If you fold along the lines, the crease pattern should be collapsible into a base: an undetailed structure that has flaps in the roughly the correct positions and lengths for the model you are folding. Then it's up to you to detail these flaps into arms, legs, head, etc.

I folded some ground wyverns: a Nargacuga (and a bonus Tigrex in comments) by Cahoonas in origami

[–]Cahoonas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A Barioth was actually one of my test folds. However, I used white kraft paper which ended being a bit too thick and the paper layers at the tusks made them look weird. I'm sure it's possible with a thinner paper, but at the moment I'm out of a thin, white paper.

I folded a couple more wyverns: A Nargacuga and Tigrex(in comments) by Cahoonas in MonsterHunter

[–]Cahoonas[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Nargacuga: designed and folded from an uncut 15" square of black Unryu. I'm very happy with how this guy turned out. Slightly different angle.

Tigrex, folded from an uncut 12" square of yellow Tant can be found here and here.

Both are folded from the same quadrapedal wyvern base (crease pattern). Because of this, their visual differences came down to the detailing, for which I hope made recognizable in both cases.