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I follow the idea by Hans-Werner Guth. Just fold one part of the edge in front and fold one part of the edge next to the first to the back. Then I get a "nose" that can be combined here with a starting triangles to a hexagon like the hexagon cross.

It isn't possible to tessellate it with this method. The triangle has an odd number of edges.

 

Folder: Dirk Eisner

Kami

Exploration de mon quartier, en commençant par mon voisin d'en face.

Yoga photo session with the incredible Jules ( yogabyjules.de )

A more common shape was the triangular kites, like this rather large one.

Inside this little origami triangle box, you'll find an accordion book with a selection from Chief Seattle's speech in 1854.

 

The box is made of 6 squares of one of my old sheets of calligraphy paper when I was practicing writing this same speech of Chief Seattle, with some added ink. The pages of the book are printed, hand cut, and accordion folded with the last page attached to the bottom of the box.

The long shadows cast by this love triangle would haunt their friendship forever, thought Rosella the Fairy, as she realised that The-Prince-In-The-Blue-Hat might love Pinkie rather than her.

Just for fun, I added some bokeh hearts because it just wasn't cheesy enough without them :-)

 

ODC, Long Shadows

TheFlickrLounge, Triangle(s)

Week 4: sewing rows together

Playground equipment along Dundas Street East. Peered into during a Toronto Photowalk in and around Toronto's Little India.

Had to work yesterday so there was only time for a few shots. This one is a view of a building near my office.

London EC1. Clifford Culpin & Partners for London Borough of Islington, 1970-73.

 

Sony A7 + Olympus OM Zuiko Shift 35mm f/2.8

An image of a warning triangle used to help motorists identify upcoming hazards such as a breakdown.

 

Image released under Creative Commons Attribution. If you use this image, please credit www.directline.com

Triangles on the tower and a beautiful sunset to go with!

Truckin' along on my paper piecing!

Geometry classes.

  

I’d love to get the multitasking learning we have to use in our life every day since kinder -instead of by mistakes and pressure later in life.

 

To learn geometry but also learn about colors, shapres, texts, design… everything altogether.

 

I searched but coudn’t find anything like that, so I created this minimal exercise.

 

Hope you like it.

Obrigada pelos comentários anteriores! :)

 

Twitter | Tumblr | DDQ | Last.fm

10.13.2010

 

update: Print magazine totally ripped me off :) — cause no one else had ever used hexagons made up by triangles before obviously … www.printmag.com/Article/The-2010-Regional-Design-Annual-...

I'm really happy with how this turned out! It's a bit saccharine-sweet, but I think it still works really well.The triangles started out 5" tall. I'm using Rachel's tutorial from her Scrap Attack series. I also trimmed the tips of triangles like described here by Sew Katie Did to make piecing easier.

 

Hand quilted in light pink Gutermann (2538) thread.

Size: About 42" x 58"

Fabrics: Two fat quarter packs I got at JoAnn a few years ago, with some Kona Corn Yellow, Moda Lemon Yellow and Robin's Egg Blue, and a little bit of aqua gingham from Children at Play on the back. The pink on the back is a basic I had in my stash, also from JoAnn.

Suurpelto, Espoo, Finland

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