Paperback(Revised)
-
PICK UP IN STORECheck Availability at Nearby Stores
Available within 2 business hours
Related collections and offers
Overview
Using the familiar rectangular shape as a base, Dollar Bill Animals in Origami offers easy-to-follow diagrams for folders at every level of expertise, from beginner to expert. You may use actual dollar bills or any paper cut to the same proportions to create a stunning display of animals of land, air, and sea: giraffe, unicorn, dinosaur, parrot, owl, shark, and many others. Also included are pictures of each completed project and instructions for basic folds. With this innovative book an exciting journey in origami art is as close as the nearest dollar.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780486824062 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Dover Publications |
Publication date: | 07/18/2018 |
Series: | Dover Crafts: Origami & Papercrafts |
Edition description: | Revised |
Pages: | 128 |
Sales rank: | 667,270 |
Product dimensions: | 8.30(w) x 10.70(h) x 0.40(d) |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
INTRODUCTION
Dollar bill folds have become very popular in origami. The paper is of good folding quality; its size, proportions, and even colors make it an interesting medium to use. You can learn how to fold a wealth of projects including a shark, turtle, apatosaurus, deer, and 28 other models.
Dollar bill folds have been a novelty for some time. Magicians often used them for tricks, stunning audiences who knew that whatever happened, cutting could not be involved. As origami developed in this country, many folders took to the dollar bill because it folds well, has always been available, and has a very adaptable rectangular shape.
I have enjoyed designing these models. Though I generally fold from squares, the dollar bill has an interesting proportion that lends itself well to animal design. In some ways, it is easier to fold animals from rectangles than from squares because animals' bodies are inherently long, allowing for more efficiency from a rectangle.
It is up to you which side of the dollar bill should show in finished models. Although the diagrams use white and shading to represent the dollar bill's two sides, you may choose which side of the actual bill you wish to show; generally, the diagrams will show predominantly the shaded side. However, the final drawings of each model are completely shaded and do not distinguish between the two sides.
Of course you do not need to fold from dollar bills. Any paper can easily be cut to form the proportions of a bill. My favorite method, shown on page 10, shows an easy way to approximate the proportions given a square or rectangle. The diagrams conform to the internationally approved Randlett-Yoshizawa style.
Origami supplies can be found in arts and craft shops, or at Dover Publications online: www.doverpublications.com. You can also visit OrigamiUSA at www.origamiusa.org for origami supplies and other related information including an extensive list of local, national, and international origami groups.
I wish to thank the origami community for encouraging me to write this book. Thanks to my editors, Jeremy and Josh Korr. Of course I also thank the many folders who proof-read the diagrams.
John Montroll
www.johnmontroll.com
(Continues…)
Excerpted from "Dollar Bill Animals in Origami"
by .
Copyright © 2018 John Montroll.
Excerpted by permission of Dover Publications, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Table of Contents
Symbols, 9,
Dollar Bills from a Square, 10,
Basic Folds, 118,
Sailboat, page 11,
Fish, page 14,
Starfish, page 17,
Seahorse, page 19,
Shark, page 22,
Duck, page 26,
Swan, page 28,
Owl, page 30,
Parrot, page 33,
Toucan, page 35,
Penguin, page 38,
Sparrow, page 41,
Rooster, page 48,
Snake, page 52,
Crane, page 44,
Triceratops, page 60,
Turtle, page 54,
Apatosaurus, page 57,
Dog, page 70,
Pig, page 64,
Sitting Cat, page 67,
Unicorn, page 82,
Rabbit, page 78,
Mouse, page 74,
Cow, page 87,
Horse, page 86,
Kangaroo, page 91,
Rhinoceros, page 99,
Elephant, page 95,
Camel, page 106,
Deer, page 102,
Giraffe, page 112,