Latest Posts

Joel Cooper

I posted something about Joel Cooper previously, a few days ago. I was very pleased when he responded to my post, and furthermore sent me a few photos of his work. With his permission I am sharing them here with you. (Click the photos for the full-size version.)

He mentioned via email that the masks he has worked on are different than anything he’s seen so far- and I agree with him completely. I think the use of tessellation techniques to arrange a polygon mesh for the purposes of 3d representation really crosses over into a level of technical folding that I have yet to see anywhere else. I feel this is really some mind-blowing material. He further says that he has been developing this style slowly over the last three years. I would love to see the progression of designs and explorations that led him to this particular line of thought, and see the development of both the technique and his folding skill! This is a real labor of love.

Joel origami tessellation mask

Furthermore, he has some complex and new tessellation patterns, as well. He’s been folding origami tessellations over the last 5 years, after seeing some of them on the internet. I have to imagine that these models only scratch the surface, and I look forward to hearing more from him about his own work!

With the exception of the Fujimoto “pyramid” (notice the modified design?) these works are all his own creations.

Joel tessellation 1Joel Origami Tessellation 3
Joel Tessellation 2Joel Origami Tessellation 4 (Fujimoto Stack)

UPDATE:

Joel is also an accomplished artist as well (even though we all know origami is an art form, too). Some googling finds this:

Lawrence Art Walk 2003

more open-source origami from origami.oschene.com

Phil (I hope he doesn’t mind me calling him Phil!) of origami.oschene.com has updated his “Puff Star” – taking it from pure CP status to a full diagram+photo set, with what I think is a particularly ingenious way of showing the folding/creasing process without spending 100 years making step-by-step diagrams.

I heartily recommend that you go download his latest work, and thank him heartily for giving us all another great example of what it means to actually share, rather than hoard.

Puff Star, Redux:

Flower Tessellation




Flower Tessellation

Originally uploaded by infinite-origami.

infinite-origami on flickr posted this rather interesting tessellation today- it’s a tiling based on pentagonal tiles, with hexagonal spacers. The pentagonal tiles look somewhat like the deltoidal tiles, but different- I’m sure they have a special name but I’m clueless as to what it is.

Anyway, I’m looking forward to seeing the reverse of this piece- there’s a lot of interesting material that is unexplored in the pentagonal tiling space, mostly due to the difficulty of folding it!

This is a nice one that plays well with triangular grid precreasing.

Variação da Spread Contraluz




Variação da Spread Contraluz

Originally uploaded by mawelucky.

I’m a few days out of date here, but this is a new work from Jane over at flickr.

As Melisande pointed out in the comments section on this photo:

Another marvelous work of yours !

This central hexagonal twist is a nice feature of many tessellations you’ve made recently, it belongs to you, I think.

I concur! this central twist design appears repeatedly in Jane’s tessellation work, and it’s one of the features that helps me to immediately identify a photo as one of her designs.

We’ll have to come up with a good name for it, since I don’t think she’d like it being called the “Sem Nome twist”…

Variação da Spread

Variação da Spread Verso Contraluz

Merry Christmas!

I’d like to wish all my friends a Merry Christmas! I’ll be travelling for much of the next week, so there will be pretty random postings for a while. I hope you spend some wonderful time with friends and family and enjoy yourself!

best wishes,

Eric