All posts filed under: blog

Paper Sculpture by Richard Sweeney

I saw these wonderful folded artworks by Richard Sweeney this morning, thanks to a tip from Oschene. There’s some very interesting concepts here, and some wonderful rounded shapes- reminiscent of Huffman’s curved folding, in some ways. Richard really must have spent a lot of time figuring out his folding techniques for these works- creating curves is amazingly hard to do accurately and cleanly! It’s some very impressive stuff, Richard- thanks for posting them on Flickr so the world can see your art. two wonderful examples- check out his whole photostream for more wonderful works

Caio Malta fight video

This is totally unrelated to origami, but I thought I’d post it anyway. My Brazilian co-worker was in an “Ultimate Cage Fight” this last weekend- he knocked out his opponent in 7 seconds with one kick. My wife and I went to the event, which honestly was pretty bizarre- but it was really fun to cheer for my friend and see him accomplish what he has been training for these last 6 months. here’s the link: https://www.origamitessellations.com/MaltaFight.wmv Don’t watch this if you’re easily disturbed! Looking forward to your next crazy cage fight, Caio. See more info from his friend’s website here, including photos and the fight poster. This won’t be a common sidestep from my normal website content, but it was just weird enough to share it with those of you who know me. For those of you who don’t- this isn’t my normal taste in entertainment 🙂 -Eric

My Latest Folding

My Latest Folding Originally uploaded by Ori-gomi. Here’s what I’ve been up to lately. rest of post blatantly ripped from my flickr page: So, I haven’t posted much origami lately. There’s a few reasons for this. We had some family issues with surgery, and then with everyone being sick, which really isn’t all that is conducive to artistic creation. That’s been an ongoing problem for a few weeks, and thanks to those of you who gave me some support through that, I appreciate it. …and the other thing is that I have been doing a lot of folding that just isn’t something that is worth sharing! I’ve been playing around with octagons, dodecagons, and other many-sided polygons and their various uses in making tessellation designs; however, much of my test folds are incomplete partial sections that are useful only for me, as a reference fold. Hopefully all this playing around will yield some fruit, in the form of a larger tessellation of more complex shapes, but I’m not quite sure how that is going to …

Help Digg Joel!

If you have a Digg account, please take a minute to go “digg” a link to Joel’s origami: http://digg.com/technology/Amazing_Origami_Mask_Tessellations The more “diggs”, the more visibility the story gets. Thanks! -Eric