All posts filed under: blog

Gesso piece

  Recently, we’ve been experimenting with traditional gesso – made from rabbit-skin glue and chalk, applied in many thin layers to prepare surfaces for painting. On a whim, my partner Ioana applied it to a test piece I folded from some heavy cardstock. After about 10 layers, it is now one heavy solid piece of matte white surface, which retains all of the fold marks and natural paper crumples. We’re going to try more of these in the future, but for now I wanted to share this, and show how delightfully the light plays off the matte surface of this work. The final piece is about 1m x 60cm.  

Vespertilio - by Ioana Stoian

Vespertilio – corrugated paper bat

My partner Ioana Stoian recently created this wonderful model of a bat, using origami corrugations – her first origami design! I’m very pleased with this model and helped her to create a simple set of diagrams and a crease pattern, which you can download via her site: http://www.ioanastoian.com/2012/pleated-paper-bat/ You can see it also folds flat – the world’s first “flat pack” bat 🙂  

Polish convention diagrams

I was the guest at the Polish Origami convention a few weeks ago, and I had a fantastic time in Kraków! I heartily recommend to anyone that they should attend this convention; the organizers Krystyna and Wojtek Burczyk did an amazing job putting together a very pleasant origami meeting. Kraków is a beautiful and delightful city with huge nightlife, and I had a blast. And lots of great food too! For their convention booklet, put together by the gifted Haligami (Halina Rościszewska-Narloch), I submitted six CP patterns. I’m posting them here too, for those who might be interested in checking them out.         All diagrams are copyright Eric Gjerde; and are additionally released under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license.    

a return to old times

I folded this hexakaidecagon from a plain sheet of 15cm kami, like I used to do back when I started folding origami tessellations. It’s challenging paper to fold, as making 32 creases through the center point leads to a lot of paper turning to mush! Rather than folding a big twist, I twirled the excess into a spire shape, which I think is much more interesting and organic. It reminds me of the pagodas in Myanmar. thought I’d share this little fold with you, and enjoy the retro days together.

Rebecca Gieseking

I’ve been very interested in this work from artist Rebecca Giesieking, particularly this latest piece, “Spiral Bowl”. Explorations of curved folds and organic structures are quite exciting to see. I look forward to her next work! -Eric   Spiral Bowl   Lidded Bowl Experiment with Diagonal Gores Octagonal Experiment Bowl