Behold my aardvark aarmy!

The rainbow colors are to show that I value diversity, even while I take over the world. Which I will do as soon as I finish folding the Pink Flap Field Brigade. And maybe a reserve Digger Division.
(This is a fun and addictive model to fold. I've several scattered about the building at work, too. As scouts, of course.)
(BTW, going by a sample size of one, cheap Japanese origami paper is different from cheap American origami paper. Though perhaps I should say rather cheap domestic and cheap for-export paper, as a fair bulk of 'gami goods in American craft-stores is made in Japan. Or better terminology yet, cheap packaged-in-Japanese versus cheap packaged-in-English. In any case, the latter, as it cheapens keeps more or less the same texture but becomes stiffer: the creases are more springy. This packet of the former (100 sheets of 15x15 cm for under $4, which is WAY less expensive than you can find the latter) folds just as crisply but feels like it's an incremental step towards newsprint. It wicks up humidity too, so that on muggy days you're halfway to wetfolding.)
---L.
The rainbow colors are to show that I value diversity, even while I take over the world. Which I will do as soon as I finish folding the Pink Flap Field Brigade. And maybe a reserve Digger Division.
(This is a fun and addictive model to fold. I've several scattered about the building at work, too. As scouts, of course.)
(BTW, going by a sample size of one, cheap Japanese origami paper is different from cheap American origami paper. Though perhaps I should say rather cheap domestic and cheap for-export paper, as a fair bulk of 'gami goods in American craft-stores is made in Japan. Or better terminology yet, cheap packaged-in-Japanese versus cheap packaged-in-English. In any case, the latter, as it cheapens keeps more or less the same texture but becomes stiffer: the creases are more springy. This packet of the former (100 sheets of 15x15 cm for under $4, which is WAY less expensive than you can find the latter) folds just as crisply but feels like it's an incremental step towards newsprint. It wicks up humidity too, so that on muggy days you're halfway to wetfolding.)
---L.
no subject
Date: 15 August 2008 03:44 am (UTC)play withhelp your aardvark army take over the world.So, do you prefer the paper targeted for the Japanese paper-folding audience, or the American one?
no subject
Date: 15 August 2008 05:02 am (UTC)Somewhere in the house I have an elderly packet of origami papers. I thought about trying to fold stuff for a while, but my utter lack of get up and git got me.
no subject
Date: 15 August 2008 02:51 pm (UTC)The better commercial papers, as opposed to handcrafted, available in the States are all Japanese or Korean.
---L.
no subject
Date: 15 August 2008 02:53 pm (UTC)Origami is a good activity for sitting around and not doing things. And there are some excellent introductory books out there.
---L.
no subject
Date: 16 August 2008 11:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 17 August 2008 12:54 am (UTC)Meanwhile, I've started learning how to wetfold. This is ... interesting. Experience folding large pieces of tissue-paper seems to be a plus.
---L.