Pureland origami
Origami style
Pureland origami is a style of origami invented by the British paper folder John Smith that is limited to using only mountain and valley folds. The aim of Pureland origami is to make origami easier for inexperienced folders and those who have impaired motor skills. This means that many, but not all, of the more complicated processes that are common in regular origami, are impossible; and so alternative manipulations have been developed to create similar effects.
See also
- Origami
- Origami techniques
External links
- Some Thoughts on Minimal Folding by John Smith in Bits of Smith.
- FOLDS.NET - Some diagrams of pureland origami.
- The Origami Interest Group - Three pureland diagrams. (archived 2011)
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- Big-little-big lemma
- Crease pattern
- Huzita–Hatori axioms
- Kawasaki's theorem
- Maekawa's theorem
- Map folding
- Napkin folding problem
- Pureland origami
- Yoshizawa–Randlett system
- Dragon curve
- Flexagon
- Möbius strip
- Regular paperfolding sequence
- Miura fold
- Modular origami
- Paper bag problem
- Rigid origami
- Schwarz lantern
- Sonobe
- Yoshimura buckling
- Alexandrov's uniqueness theorem
- Flexible polyhedron (Bricard octahedron, Steffen's polyhedron)
- Net
- Blooming
- Common net
- Source unfolding
- Star unfolding
- Fold-and-cut theorem
- Lill's method
- Geometric Exercises in Paper Folding
- Geometric Folding Algorithms
- Geometric Origami
- A History of Folding in Mathematics
- Origami Polyhedra Design
- Origamics
- Roger C. Alperin
- Margherita Piazzola Beloch
- Yan Chen
- Robert Connelly
- Erik Demaine
- Martin Demaine
- Rona Gurkewitz
- David A. Huffman
- Tom Hull
- Kôdi Husimi
- Humiaki Huzita
- Toshikazu Kawasaki
- Robert J. Lang
- Anna Lubiw
- Jun Maekawa
- Kōryō Miura
- Joseph O'Rourke
- Tomohiro Tachi
- Eve Torrence
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