Vertebral Stretch - 3D Wigglies

December 17th, 2007



PCOC Gallery Exhibition Items, 5/5

Originally uploaded by EricGjerde.

I’ve been experimenting with this three dimensional folded structure for a little while now, and for reference I’ve created a simple crease pattern in case anyone wants to fold this.

You can grab one of two versions - one on a grid, and one without. They are much smaller versions meant for reference understanding; just expand the construct to make it larger.

http://www.origamitessellations.com/docs/3D_wigglies.pdf

The version superimposed on a grid: (sorry for the misalignment, this was done for reference purposes only, not for publication anywhere!)

http://www.origamitessellations.com/docs/3D_wigglies_grid.pdf

I hope you enjoy, and if you fold one of these please send me a photo! I’d love to see how it turns out.

Posted in art, creative commons, diagrams, flickr photos, my work, origami, origami tessellations | Comments (5)

5 Responses to “Vertebral Stretch - 3D Wigglies”

  1. BRDParker Says:

    Looks good Eric! I might fold one of these…

  2. Kevin Chiang Says:

    Dear lord!

    Eric! I had no idea that you published your book!
    my mom is letting me buy books for christmas ;) yours will definately be one of them…
    = )

    Merry Christmas Eric!

    -Kevin C.

  3. Tien Yin Yau Says:

    I love this!

    I folded one for my sister in Rome for Christmas. It completely blew her mind! I had a hard time getting it to lie flat though. She ended up wearing it as an upper arm cuff for a few days.

    Thanks for the diagram!

  4. Eric Gjerde Says:

    Hey there! nice to hear from you!

    It doesn’t like to lay flat - it’s very springy and compressed, it likes to curve. Glue helps. :)

    You don’t have any photos of the one you made, do you? I’d love to see it!

  5. Tien Yin Says:

    I’ll get her to take a picture when she gets back from traveling. She certainly has enough photographer friends there. . .

    I started with a shorter one and only got it to lie flat with the help of some very heavy books. I finally found a use for all my expensive textbooks!

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