Submitted by Sara on 24 April 2008 - 2:30pm
Designer:
Wu, Joseph
Folder:
Adams, Sara
Difficulty Level:
Intermediate
Model type:
Reptiles
Fantasy
Paper ratio:
Non-square Rectangle
Paper size: 3.3cm by 19.8cm
Paper size: 3.3cm by 19.8cm
Comments
Submitted by Louro (not verified) on 14 May 2008 - 2:56pm Permalink
What???
Are you absolutely sure about the size of the paper. I made with 3,5cm by 18cm and it looked pretty small. You say that yours is 10 times smaller. If it is as you say the color change ribbon is 1/5 of a milimeter and the coin (by comparison in the pic) about 3mm in diameter.
I like your work very much and this site is very good. Keep up with the good work.
Submitted by Sara on 1 June 2008 - 9:29am Permalink
Mea culpa
Ah, so sorry. I did get the numbers wrong. Of course, you are right in that I folded the dragon from a 3.3cm by 19.8cm sheet of paper. I corrected this right when you wrote the comment, but seem to have forgotten to thank you for your pointer. So here it is: many thanks for pointing this out to me. I guess we all make errors once in a while, but it's great when people help you find and correct them.
Submitted by Tre (not verified) on 1 June 2008 - 4:52am Permalink
big fan
hello,
i'm a super fan. some of your videos helped me through some of the models i tried to make and failed. im getting really frustrated recently, i want to make really cool looking stuff but it's so complicated, any ideas? i know of the BOS but are there any origami societies located in chicago? i loved your videos from the conventions. some of the models were insane! big fan.
Tre
Submitted by Sara on 1 June 2008 - 9:33am Permalink
Societies in your area
Hi Tre,
I'm guessing you mean Chicago, Illinois?
There's Origami USA (http://www.origami-u...), which is an enourmous origami society that you will probably appreciate. Google also helped me find CHAOS (CHicago Area Origami Society, http://home.earthlin...), which might be even more appropriate.
Submitted by mel (not verified) on 27 October 2008 - 12:46pm Permalink
:D
dude, you still rock xxxxxxxxx
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 29 January 2009 - 11:40pm Permalink
size
what size did you use
Submitted by Sara on 30 January 2009 - 8:07am Permalink
See above
Paper size: 3.3cm by 19.8cm
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 19 September 2010 - 4:06am Permalink
the cobra?
would a 8 square rectangle paper work well with this cobra?
http://www.giladorig...
http://farm2.static....
Submitted by Sara on 20 September 2010 - 7:18pm Permalink
Confused
I don't know what you mean by "8 square rectangle paper". And I haven't folded this model yet. So I fear I really cannot answer your question. :(
-- Sara
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 21 September 2010 - 12:51am Permalink
what i mean is...
that means how many squares you can make from it
like copy paper makes 1 square fold it in half you get 2 squares
fold it in half again you get 4 squares
see the bfcc is 10 squares
the caterpillar is 3 or more squares
this i am making from a 8 square paper
sorry if this didnt make sense
and by-the-way i having folded it yet either i'm waiting to finish the bfcc...
Submitted by Sara on 21 September 2010 - 1:44pm Permalink
Not sure, but I read about 1 by 40
I don't have diagrams for Roland Koh's cobra, so I don't know. I read on a forum that the diagrams suggest you start with a paper with a ratio of 1 by 40. In your terms, I guess that means: 40 squares, not 8.
-- Sara
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 21 September 2010 - 2:18pm Permalink
not koh's
its David Derudas's
Submitted by Sara on 21 September 2010 - 3:37pm Permalink
David Derudas' cobra
That cobra starts with a paper with a ratio of 1 by 34. I'm guessing 1 by 8 will be enough to fold the head and maybe the start of the tail. Also see: http://digilander.li...
-- Sara
Submitted by Bubba (not verified) on 30 June 2011 - 7:28pm Permalink
Amazing
That dragon is amazing. I don't think I could ever fold anything that small.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 8 September 2011 - 2:38am Permalink
:)
It's not small, it's just a giant coin
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