While looking for books on origami in my local library, I found a book about making jewellery from folded metal sheets. Not what I thought I was looking for but it contained some really interesting ideas that at least partially solved my problem with making curved folds.
As is often the case, the solution was simple – cut the circle across the folds to release the tension created by the folds. Or start with a cone shape.
By cutting across the folds, the 2 “arms” of paper can slide over each other supporting the curved fold and allowing the paper to form a dome or cone shape.
Adding a second hole:
Joining one of the cuts to the opposite hole creates a very different shape:
And joining both pairs of cuts to the opposite side:
Day 10
What happens if I cut one large and 1 small hole?
Joining the cuts to the opposite side again – just on one side:
And both sides:
Day 11
Adding curves to a square of paper, this piece started with 2 semi-cirles, then I added 2 larger semi-circles:
What if I do the same to a pentagon?
What if I change the sizes of the semi-circles?
Day 12
What if I cut a semi-circle in one of the curves and add extra curved folds?
Joining the 2 sides of the cut causes the middle of the pentagon to dome up even higher:
Day 13
I tried adding more curved pleats to a circle with a cut across the pleats, this was still tricky but worked better than my previous attempts:
Day 14
I don’t know about you but I am finding some of these shapes really exciting! The pentagons and the last of the pleated circles especially so!
Time to make some more felt! ๐
This is the first of the pentagons with 5 even semicircles around the edges:
Once folded, the corners of the pentagon lift and with felt being more malleable than paper it was very easy to bring the 5 corners towards the centre making this pretty flower shape.
Day 15
revisiting the pentagon with curved pleats on one side – this time in felt
The pleated circle at the front of this image was reluctant to meet at its edges but I am sure I can trim the edges so they line up and could be stitched. I rather the like the bowl shape this piece is forming
I have long admired the work of Andrea Noeske-Porada, she is a felt artist best known for her origami pieces. As far as I can tell she does not have a website but if you type her name into google you will find yourself buried under an avalanche of inspiring images of her work and what her students have made.
For years I was fascinated by her kaleidocycle design and hoped to take a workshop with her to learn her felt origami techniques but after our move to NZ I realised this dream is probably never going to happen, so set myself the challenge of trying to figure out how to make one. It took a few attempts but I was eventually successful.
Please don’t ask me to explain how it was made, this is Andrea’s design and if you can’t figure it out, please sign up for a class with her ๐
I acknowledge I am a bit of a creative magpie, I always have at least 3 projects on the go and my UFO (unfinished objects) box is overflowing. Maybe this is you too? I suspect it is part of the creative mindset that we struggle to focus on just one thing at a time, our brains are wired to be constantly on the lookout for the next exciting development….
In some ways I think this is a good thing, it means I am frequently presented with opportunities to incorporate 2 or more techniques or materials in the same project to create novel combinations. However, I also feel like I am frequently just skimming the surface of what is possible with each technique or idea. With that in mind I decided to kick off 2024 with a 30 day challenge (feel free to play along if you wish!):
To explore a different folded / pleated shape every day
This theme was partly inspired by origami felt, and origami has already worked its way into what I have been doing this month but I have deliberately avoided using origami in the mission statement to leave the door open for exploring related techniques such as pleating and smocking. I’m also bound to go off on some random tangent before the end of the month too!
The first week:
In order to really learn, we first need to make mistakes or encounter some minor disaster….
My first “disaster” was instigated by this book:
It is chock-full of inspiring and gorgeous (mostly paper) sculptures but contains no instructions at all… “how hard can it be?” I cockily thought to myself as I reached for some wool and a pair of scissors….
Thankfully I had enough sense to start small:
No matter how I stretched and rubbed the felt it refused to make lovely concentric pleats and folds ๐
I convinced myself it was because I used an oval template instead of circle, so on day 2 I made this:
While I like the shape of this one a little more, it still wasn’t folding how I expected it to.
Frustrated, I decided to play with paper folding instead (looking back this would have been a much more sensible place to start!).
Day 3:
I found some amazing origami websites (with some much needed instructions!) and sat down to play (I apologise for the scruffy appearance of some of my origami but these pieces have been folded and unfolded multiple times):
The box was fun to make but there are much easier ways to make cubes from felt (take a look at my free book resist tutorial if you’d like to give that a go).
I love this next pattern, this is one that I have attempted to make in felt before but playing with it in paper, I’m enjoying the stretchy qualities it has and wondering if it would work as a cowl? I found this print out on an engineering website, apparently this is a popular pattern for folding mirrors and solar panels used on satellites.
Day 4
The photo of this piece doesn’t do it justice, it is much more interesting to look at from different angles, you can probably tell from the state of it that it has been unfolded and refolded multiple times when I translated the pattern into felt.
Day 5
I decided to revisit the concertina style folds of my first 2 attempts in felt but this time in paper.
The circles were still frustrating me, the curved pleats just refused to fold, I now think I understand why they don’t work but I will save those explorations for my next post.
Concertina folds along straight lines were far more successful:
Day 6
Day 7
Excited by how well the paper origami samples turned out I started translating some of the shapes into prefelt and felting them. The felt versions are much more flexible than their paper cousins, offering a myriad of different forms just by twisting or folding different sections, my favourite is the flower shape at the end of this video:
Day 8
I turned my favourite of the origami shapes into felt and was very pleased with the outcome: