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Model: Triangle Twist Flower
Design: Diana Teica
Size: one Hexagon with a side-length of 12cm; grid of 32
Paper: sandwich-paper
Some days ago I met my origami-friend Anett in Munic to do some folding.
She gave me as a gift a little model of Triangle Twist Variations. I was thrilled about the beauty. – At home I tried it for myself. And very deep in my brain I remembered a photo I made in Berlin at the German Origami-Convention. It was a tessellation made by Chantal Pixley. I took a second look at this photo and tried to do fold it. And happily I made it !
Thanks for inspiration to Anett and Chantal Pixley.
Here is the photo I remembered
www.flickr.com/photos/faltwelt/14119655772/in/set-7215764...
Please have a look at Chantal’s flickr site:
do. Good Stitches
tutorial from film in the fridge
www.filminthefridge.com/2011/10/12/scrappy-triangles-a-qu...
A Patch of Old Snow, Ugo Rondinone (2012).
Avec peu d'effets, je crois que c'est l'œuvre qui m'a le plus marquée. Un truc totalement inconnu.
inspired by Ildiko H. Vass, Francis Ow, and all the triangular bag fans visiting the german origami convention OD2012! I had to fix some ideas to folds ...
Why G*d (read: Graphtec) gave us the Craft ROBO! From royalty-free packaging file to prototype in under five minutes. Sorry for the blurry shots...was trying to post in under ten!
I matched prints to make diamond shapes, based on a quilt I saw online somewhere. I did not realize that the way that you pin them determines whether the angle is left to right or right to left. I am going to have to think about how to put these together.
I matched prints to make diamond shapes, based on a quilt I saw online somewhere. I did not realize that the way that you pin them determines whether the angle is left to right or right to left. I am going to have to think about how to put these together.
In New Zealand the majority of sub-marine cables and pipelines are marked on the shore at the point where they enter and leave the water. The use of the word sub-marine refers to cables and pipes that are under the water and is not about actual submarine boats.
Triangles are present, in one way or another, in almost everything we see – it’s just a case of distinguishing them and knowing what to do with them. In Week 3, we learned they make great compositional tools as they’re easy to make and manipulate and are remarkably common.
This collage features photos from participating members. Find out more at Compositionally Challenged, where we aim to inspire creativity and improve our technical skills.
I put 4 equilateral triangles inside a cube to show the distance from the midpoints of each of the 12 edges of the cube are always consistant. Its hard to tell in the photo because the triangles are all the same color, but none of them actually touch each other, they just float in space around each other because they only touch the cube by their 3 vertices.
Simple triangle block from Oh, Fransson! and Sew Mama Sew sew-along
This was a fun and easy mini quilt to whip-up over the weekend. I used some vintage fabrics from my stash along with some newer ones and tried my hand at stippling. Hmmm....not so sure about that stippling. Hoping it will grow on me. :)
I’m totally happy with it…n sure I’ll make another one when another baby is on the way c”,)
Get the pattern on my blog for free!