Year: 2006

tessellated origami lamp

Finally! Originally uploaded by freeflyfrog77. new flickr folder freeflyfrog77 created this beautiful lamp out of a 5-foot sheet of paper! watching the build process on this is fascinating- make sure to read the notes, too. here’s the description of how it was designed: I used a piece of paper from a roll we have at work (kids draw on it off an easel). I liked the stiffness of it. I used a yard stick and ruler to score all the folds before hand. With a little pressure the paper just “popped” into its fold. It required fine tuning at the points though. As for the pattern it is actually really simplistic. I took a piece of paper one pleat wide and simply folded it to a shape I liked the profile of the lamp to be. I then transferred it on to the paper flipping the angles every pleat…The clincher I think was the scoring. I did it with a mechanical pencil tip with no lead in it. I went through in a few spots …

links for 2006-02-08

TNPI – Do it Yourself .mac Matt Simerson (I keep running into this guy online, somehow…) posts this nicely detailed way to replace most of the .mac functionality with your own *nix box. (tags: apple computer DIY Hacks mac freebsd macosx) Build your own macro ring-light nice instructions for building your own ring light – a way of getting even lighting on a subject that is being macro-photographed. (tags: photography lighting ring-light DIY maker hacks camera)

links for 2006-02-07

Tantalizing Tesselations!! educational page with different lessons for kids on tessellation geometries, and types of symmetries. some easy-to-explain and understand material. (personal reference bookmark) (tags: tessellations geometry mathematics lessons school learning) The artwork of Kenneth A. Huff Delicious complex geometric artwork, with a strong organic feeling to it. inspiring! (tags: art 3d artwork organic geometry geometric pure)

origami salvage yard

origami salvage yard Originally uploaded by origami joel. Joel Cooper has several new photos online- I found this one to be the most striking. it’s the cast-offs from his mask folding; he says that the designs that don’t work out get re-used as prototyping material. I think we all understand that- especially once you’ve spent all that time precreasing the paper, it feels wrong to just throw it away. due to the sheer quantity of creases on these designs, it almost looks like faces melting, or something odd like that… they all seem very sad, to me. I still find these amazing. check his photo stream on flickr for a great set of posts on his creation process for these tessellated masks.

Parallel Sinusoids – Backlit

Parallel Sinusoids – Backlit Originally uploaded by Owesen. Fredrik Owesen posted these odd, intriguing linear tessellation folds earlier today. Hopefully Mélisande doesn’t feel like she’s the only one folding in this symmetry, now! I personally find the negative space in this design to be the most interesting- it’s an unusual shape, especially in our 30-45-60-90 degree world.