Saturday, March 30, 2013

Origami


Origami is the Japanese traditional art of paper folding. Benefits of origami in addition to pleasure is to simulate creativity, train speed in performing motor hand movements, as well as train your memory. There are several different types of origami:
  1. Action Origami
    Origami is not only comprised of a stationary object, but no one could move. Usually origami movement aided by hand to make gestures such as flying, gliding, flapping, jumping, or open your mouth. Example of popular action origami is origami frog that can jump if the tip back on tap, airplanes or secret ninja weapon that could fly if thrown.
  2. Modular Origami
    Modular origami sometimes also called the 3D origami. Origami modular is origami that composed of several folds of paper the same shape. Usually a simple form module folds, but to compile a particular object is usually quite difficult.
  3. Wet-Folding Origami
    Wet-folding origami is the art of paper folding in which the paper use moistened or wetted. Once the form is completed origami and then allowed to dry. A moist paper more easily shaped by the geometry of the more flexible than dry paper. Skills origami artists do not just fold the wet but also objects like curves and bulges.
  4. Pureland Origami
    Pureland origami is a type of art of paper folding with the stricter rules may only use direct crease. Type origami was developed by the British artist named John Smith in the 1970s to help people  learn origami or have physical limitations motor.
  5. Tesselations Origami
    Tesselation is an art form arrangement of tiles on a two-dimensional plane to form a uniform field. Tesselations origami is an art form tile layout using paper that is folded in such a way as to produce a uniform field.
  6. Kirigami
    In the traditional art of origami are not known kirigami, kirigami own new term known in the 20th century. Kirigami is the art of folding and cutting paper to create art motorcycle. Some people enter as part of the Kirigami Origami because of the similarity of the element name and the art of paper folding.

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