Loved this video, so informative. Thank you for taking your time and giving us the info breakdown. Sometimes when your following books that are in Japanese you can’t understand that type of info that must be written and not illustrated in the books.
Excellent tutorial! Have you seen Jo Nakashima’s “Origami Tips & Tricks #1 - How to Divide the Paper into N Equal Parts”? I often use this method but do a pencil tick mark as you do. It’s a nifty technique for unusual divisions &/or odd size paper (though centimeters are fairly easy to divide no matter the size). I am soaking up your videos like a sponge. You are a teacher! Lockdown? Who cares. More time to play! Many thanks.
@@swasti_tanwar23 Sorry for the year long delay in replying! 😬 At 4:09 I show a table with the grids needed for clovers and hydrangeas. A 3x3 hydrangea needs a 20x20 grid 👍
The diagonal divisions are the same as the horizontal and verticals. So for a 16 division square grid, you would also need 16 diagonal divisions from corner to corner.
I believe any number of clover layers will also end up the same size because the amount of paper hidden in the pleats is proportional to the size of the original paper. I just looked at one on my desk that it is an 8 layer variation and it’s the same size! 🤔
@@origami.by.e9415 Thank you so much for the answer. I thought myself about this reason of the amount of paper hidden in the pleats but I thought maybe I am wrong. I love your accurasy grid folding also. I dream to fold some nice hi density hidrangea for myself and some nice variations.
Great video Mr. E! Very straightforward and informative. Looking forward to your next video :)
Loved this video, so informative. Thank you for taking your time and giving us the info breakdown. Sometimes when your following books that are in Japanese you can’t understand that type of info that must be written and not illustrated in the books.
Excellent tutorial! Have you seen Jo Nakashima’s “Origami Tips & Tricks #1 - How to Divide the Paper into N Equal Parts”? I often use this method but do a pencil tick mark as you do. It’s a nifty technique for unusual divisions &/or odd size paper (though centimeters are fairly easy to divide no matter the size). I am soaking up your videos like a sponge. You are a teacher! Lockdown? Who cares. More time to play! Many thanks.
Thank you! Very clear explanation! Super useful grid table 😉
I want some help how many grid division required to make 3 by 3 hydrangea
@@swasti_tanwar23 Sorry for the year long delay in replying! 😬
At 4:09 I show a table with the grids needed for clovers and hydrangeas. A 3x3 hydrangea needs a 20x20 grid 👍
Thank you dude these are so complicated lol
Love your videos.Do you plan on doing any Fractal tessellations?
How do the diagonal creases work?
The diagonal divisions are the same as the horizontal and verticals. So for a 16 division square grid, you would also need 16 diagonal divisions from corner to corner.
Lovely.folding!!!!
Thanks !
Nice
Are you using only kami 15x15cm? Because it is curious to me how all at the final model have the same measurement.
Yes indeed, all folded from 15cm kami.
I believe any number of clover layers will also end up the same size because the amount of paper hidden in the pleats is proportional to the size of the original paper. I just looked at one on my desk that it is an 8 layer variation and it’s the same size! 🤔
@@origami.by.e9415 Thank you so much for the answer. I thought myself about this reason of the amount of paper hidden in the pleats but I thought maybe I am wrong. I love your accurasy grid folding also. I dream to fold some nice hi density hidrangea for myself and some nice variations.
Best of luck! They are fantastically addictive. Feel free to ask for help if you need 👍
@@origami.by.e9415 Thank you so so much for help in advance :)
Ilove you mr E
And I love you Mr Lowry!
Very informative. Thank you. What paper are you using?
👍 I used standard kami