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Personal Origami Web Sites
There are probably well over 100 Web pages dedicated exclusively to paperfolding. In fact, a quick
search at Altavista
turns up 69,617 Web pages containing the word "origami" (as of midnight, March 29, 1999). A
search at Yahoo turns up 3 categories and 102 sites,
and the
Origami category
boasts 50 pages.
I have listed here some of the more comprehensive
and extensive origami Web sites along with short descriptions. As always, if you have
any comments or suggestions,
please let me know!
Joseph Wu's Origami Page
is known as the "master" origami page, with many links, diagrams, photo galleries, information about origami,
and much more! Joseph also provides a Who's Who of origami notables and some great photos of his
original models.
Alex Barber's
Origami Page
is beautifully designed with lots of information!
Alex Barber has a list of folders on the internet, pictures of
Origami USA Annual Conventions, lots of
diagrams,
and a
searchable origami
model database!
Jasper's Origami
Menagerie
contains a photo gallery of at least 40 models by Lang, Montroll, Engel,
and others. Jasper's site also boasts
folds.net Links:
Origami Diagrams on the Web, which has links to about 40 diagrams,
including several at folds.net like
Eeyore, the one-piece shuriken, and the cherry blossom.
Alex Bateman's Origami Page
has lots of diagrams for people to fold and a page of his tesselation folds with some instructions.
George Ho's
Origami and
Mental Health Therapy promotes the use of origami in therapy.
George provides his origami experience in a psychiatric hospital, and is
looking to share information with others on this topic. He is also
collecting a long list of the benefits of origami, and provides historical
and current-day examples. What a wonderful and inspiring Web site!
Robert Gatliff's Origami Page
has some colorful origami pictures and origami computer art, including ray-traced images. He has models by Max Hulme,
Robert Neale, and Kawasaki.
The Clouds of Thoki Yenn, also known
as Origami Denmark, has information about both
origami and
kirigami,
including wonderful diagrams for models such as a DNA molecule, various
boxes, and the magic rings, or Umulius Rectangulum, which you see pictured
here.
Sy's Paper Folding Page
boasts lots of models designed by Sy, arranged by category. There are also diagrams here in Adobe's PDF format.
Dennis Walker's Origami Page:
Here you will find diagrams for six of Dennis' own origami creations, including a crown, a jackal head,
and a Christmas decoration.
The Origami Page of Edward Crankshaw:
Edward has created a piece of sculpture based on the Japanese culture as it relates to himself and origami.
He has a copy of a research paper he wrote on the influences of the East and West as it relates to Origami, as well as
his origami philosophy (check out the
The Ten Commandments of Origami),
poetry, links, and a list of about 60 origami books that he owns.
Paul Close's Origami Photo Gallery
boasts photos of beautiful, complex Robert Lang models. These origami photos are some of the nicest I've seen!
Jim Plank's Modular Origami Page
has some beautiful pictures of some very complex polyhedron
modulars (origami models made from many different similarly-folded pieces).
Susan Parker's Cranes for Peace
The Cranes for Peace Page will continue to provide information
about Sadako projects as well as other crane projects.
David Petty's Origami
Page include a very comprehensive list of traditional origami models
along with pictures and information as well as many of his own
modular
wreaths and many other diagrams. He also discusses his
origami
philosophy and the
main creative
strands that go into the creation of an origami model.
If you like miniature origami, you'll love
Tommy's Origami Page,
which features various miniature modulars as well as some impressive
money
folds. All of Tommy's miniature models are shown next to coins so that
you can see their amazing size and accuracy!
Mette Pederson has published her own set of modular origami books based
around her Mette Units. Mette uses these Units to create many beautiful
rings, cubes, and
quilts. Check out the mini gallery in her
cube at work,
and her pictures of the
OrigamiUSA Annual
Convention!
All Oriland: Origami Galore! is the Web
Site of Yurii & Katrin Shumakovs. A beautiful and colorful site, Oriland
boasts many great diagrams for models such as a robot, a large gallery of
models, info on some origami CD-ROMs, info on origami books and authors,
and even some information for parents and teachers on how origami can help
develop and increase creative abilities in children.
Meenakshi's
Modular Mania displays a wide array of modulars from such creators as
Arnstein & Simon, Tomoko Fuse, Jim Plank, and Robert Neale. Her various
displays are complemented by a sonobe unit of her own creation and
a wide array of
modular folding
instructions!
John Marcolina's Wet-folding
Site has an
amazing
gallery of wet-folded models displaying various Kawahata dinosaurs
from
Origami Fantasy, Issei Yoshino's triceratops
skeleton, and various animals by Lang, Weiss, Montroll, and others. The
picture you see here is the Mask of the Buddha by NISHIKAWA Seiji, from
ORU Quarterly Folding Diagrams Vol. 2.
At Matthias Gutfeldt's
Origami Page
you will find diagrams for some of his own designs, including a standing
starbox (pictured here) and the wave. He also has a number of photos of
models by Kasahara, Fuse, and others.
Yuki
and Suzanne's Origami Jewelry
are made from extremely tiny origami cranes surrounded by a hand-blown glass vial or tube.
They use paper no larger than 5 x 5mm, and they fold entirely by hand!
Roman Snytsar's
Virtual Origami Project
showcases an amazing virtual origami world using VRML. You can travel in
any direction - up, down, left, right, forward, backward, as you view
these origami dinosaurs. You can view all of this in your Web browser
using a VRML plug-in.
Francis Ow's Origami
Page
contains diagrams for some heart models from his book, "Origami Hearts",
and a number of modular creations from his book, "Modular Origami".
Phil's Page o'
Origami
has some great Star Wars models, along with diagrams, including a Tie
Fighter, Star Destroyer, Naboo Fighter, X-Wing Fighter, Tie Bomber, and
AT-ST. You'll also find links to other Star Wars sites, origami sites,
and Star Wars origami sites!
Teik Seong's
Simply Origami
displays Teik's great folding talent with models such as Lang's Blackdevil
Angler, Neal Elias' Last Waltz, and Kawahata's Dimetrodon. A real
inspiration for those attempting these toughest of origami models!
Brian Cox has a one- or two-week program called
Creating a
Balance which teaches paperfolding as a means to develop motor
coordination, attention to detail, listening skills, cooperative learning,
sequential learning, and the ability to follow instructions, as well as
patience, self-esteem, confidence, and creativity!
Robin Glynn's Origami Page has
an origami gallery as well as diagrams for
some of these models, including a badger (shown here), a teddy bear, big
bird, the Eiffel Tower, a modular star box, and a treasure chest.
Anool's
Origami site has some incredibly small miniature cranes, as well
as a few other beautiful pictures such as the one you see here, Kawasaki's
rose with Joseph Wu's Rose Base.
Rudolf Appelt's
Origami
Web Site includes some diagrams for his own models, an explanation of
some basic origami symbols, and links to other origami sites. His page is
available in
Portuguese
and
German
as well!
Origami 4 You by Emmajg has a
nice gallery and diagrams for models such as the daffodil you see
here. The site also features a great list of books and their contents, and
it offers help with the famous Kawasaki rose!
Sid Carlson's
Experiments in Displaying
Origami provides insight into an often understated aspect of
paperfolding - presentation. The site provides beautiful examples of
techniques for both displaying as well as photographing models, using
designs primarily by Tuyen and Montroll.
Origami Sources on
the Web by Melissa Johnson provides a variety of links, by category,
for origami sites throughout the Web. The
Educational
Resources and
Origami
Supplies and Books
sections are especially comprehensive.
TPKong's Origami Page
hails from Malaysia and contains a beautiful gallery of his original
models, including a variety of animals, insects, birds, and mythical
creatures.
Christian's
Origami Site is completely available in both English and
German!
He has great descriptions and info for all of his
origami
books, plus a variety of picture, a discussion of paper and materials,
and a diagram for crane envelope with a different color for the crane.
Gerard & Paula's
Origami Site provides two galleries: "Your Room", containing models by Hatori
Koshiro, Tom Hull, Lewis Simon, and others, and "My Room", containing models by Paula,
including pictures and diagrams for a sprinkler, sprinklersphere, puffin, crane
kusudama, and more. Also featured is a wealth of information on knotology (making 3D
shapes from strips of paper), as well as a list of Web sites owned by members of the
origami email list. And, much of the site is available in both Dutch and
English!
Jake Crowley's Origami
Gallery features a large gallery of beautifully-folded complex models by
creators such as Lang, Komatsu, Joisel, Giunta, Kasahara, LaFosse, Kawahata,
Nisikawa, and others. He has sections for animals, dinosaurs, fantasy models,
figures, insects, masks, and sea life.
Dorothy's Blast Off to Planet Origami
features the "Origami Swami" column, which showcases original diagrams for offbeat
celebrations, plus fun model compendiums. The site also includes a variety of links to sites
on origami basics, history, benefits, diagrams, galleries, and groups, as well as a compendium
of categorized midi files for downloading and listening while you fold.
Gilad Aharoni's Origami Page
provides original diagrams for a bunny and a dragon, and book reviews of many books
including OrigamiUSA Convention books, Origami Tanteidan Convention books, and ORU Magazines.
Gilad's page also has an enormous gallery of hundreds of photos of animals, cartoon characters,
and much more!
Origami Cartoon is a gallery of original origami
landscapes
by Y.K. Chavez. Entitled "Chester & Pinky Explore the World", these dioramas are full of origami
animals and range from playgrounds to landscapes to African adventures.
Anita's Origami Page
is a tremendous resource for original origami diagrams. Anita provides a detailed
timeline and description for her creations, as well as a variety of
eye-catching photographs of her models, including a charming set from an
exhibit at a local library.
Anita's diagrams range from
a barn owl (pictured right) to the famous hungry bat, and lots of animal and seasonal
creations in between!
Takaaki Kakitsuka's Origami Page,
available in both Japanese and English, presents a very nice gallery of original models, including many
different insects, mammals, and other creatures.
Diagrams are provided for his cicada.
Carlos Gênova's
Brazilian Origami Page,
all in Portuguese, provides some origami basics (symbols, common bases, types of paper)
as well as a few diagrams and a great
gallery
of original complex models such as a gladiator, centaur, and lobster. Carlos' site
also features a set of discussions on
origami and geometry,
covering topics such as the Pythagorean Theorem, Tangrams, and a bibilography of Brazilian
references for origami and mathematics.
Rita Foelker's Origami Page
is full of beautifully diagrammed models ranging from a simple boat, box, heart, and snail
to a pencil holder, modular wreath and cube, and even a picture frame.
Peter Budai's Origami Page includes not only pictures,
origami basics, symbols, and links, but also the contents of his two latest books, articles on subjects
such as diagramming and mathematics, a catalog of self-similar folds, and original diagrams for models including a
catapult, dinosaur footprint, and a flower with leaves. Plus, the site is available in both Magyar and English!
Mark Morden's
Origami Scrapbook
features a gallery of folds by artists such as Robert Lang, Chris Palmer,
Joseph Wu, Vincent Floderer, and many others including Mark himself. The site also offers origami comics,
wallpapers, and pictures and information about the Sadako Statue at Seattle's Peace Park.
Origami with Rachel Katz is a great tour through the world of
paperfolding, with plenty about Rachel, her well-known "Storigami", the Long Island group called L.I.F.E., and
origami history, origami benefits, and a few simple and intermediate models.
Andrea Mantler's
Origami Gallery
showcases models from simple butterflies to Casanovas' complex Daedalus, as well as
some of her original models such as a piggy and modifications of Rhoad's bat.
Origami Lane - the future of 'origane' - is the
creation of dynamic folded metal sculptures using traditional origami designs and techniques
(e.g. normal origami diagrams and folding patterns). The material for metal folding can
include copper, brass, stainless steel, and aluminum. Lane Allen provides not only galleries
of his work, but also his commissioned work, how to get supplies, and links to other pages.
Nicolas Terry's
Design in Origami is available in four languages!
This site provides galleries, news, and a bibliography of works by Albertino and Lang. Check
out the
cartoon
origami!
Ben's Origami Page has a tremendous gallery of
complex models, ranging from Gilgado's alien to Hojyo's skull to Kamiya's archeoptryx. Ben
also has a very nice discussion of crease patterns, and tips for beginning, intermediate, and
advanced students of this unique type of diagrams.
Rick Nordal's
Origami Snowflake Game
provides a fun set of puzzles and challenges, similar to tangrams or other shape-based
puzzles. The site also provides fast facts, links, and more! There is even a
Yahoo Group for it!
Sharon's "Ultimate
Origami" has diagrams for a glider, lotus bookmark, vase, and tetrahedral chain, as well
as links and information.
Operation Peace Crane
is a project designed by Shingo Annen which promotes the folding of the traditional origami
crane using camouflage military patterned paper, for combined artistic/political effect.
To quote the site, "using the camouflage on the cranes represents the irony of war and peace
that are inherent in our society, as if one cannot exist without the other."
Kim Nichols creates origami floral arrangements to support research for Parkinson's.
Kim's Origami Flowers has both a
photo album and information about Kim and her work. All proceeds for her sales
go to the
Emory University School of Medicine, Neurology Parkinson's Research Department.
Hideo Komatsu's Origami Site (in Japanese)
Georgia Davidson's Studio Origami
features her modular and floral designs.
Copyright of all above graphics other than my own resides with the
respective owners of the pages to which they are linked, and are used here
with the knowledge and permission of the owners.
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