The way the fingers are folded is pretty cool.Īncient Dragon - Needs large thin paper, has many layers, isn't that fun to fold.īarosaurus - It's just really weird to foldīlue Whale - The pleats are really annoying to fold and you have to do it in 3D.Īnd THAT'S why origami is not typically classified by difficulty. Then there's some weird stuff toward the end. Mammoth - BORING, except for the cool closed sink.
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Okay there are some funky closed sinks and unwraps. Just really really good and super complex. My favorite T-Rex in all of origami.ĭivine Dragon - Not really that hard. Tyrannosaurus - Has an open sink that will drive you out of your mind. The hard thing about it is that it's 3-D.
SATOSHI KAMIYA SUPER COMPLEX ORIGAMI FULL
World of super complex origami by satoshi kamiya read full review square crease pattern. He is perhaps most well known for his dragons which require nearly 300 different precise folds to make. There are crease patterns in both sources, but they are either small or are covered up by another image, so unless you have good eyes, they would be hard to work with. Seen at the british origami society convention autumn 2007. Smilodon - Not hard at all if you use foil. As far as diagrams for this model, I have only seen them in Tanteidan Magazine 110 and 'World of Super-complex Origami'. Orca - Should be higher on the list, but it is so creative, and the ingenuity just makes it that much easier to get through.Ĭoelophysis - It's harder than you may think. Forming the hooves is the only really difficult part. Some really cool complex (but not hard) collapses. Inoshishigami - The pleating is kind of tricky, but it's really cool how it all comes out. Pegasus - Cool to fold, but it just doesn't look that great. More like a Kawahata or Miyajima piece than your typical Kamiya fare. The legs do get kind of thick.Įagle Ray - Just be careful of the paper tearing when you make the spine.Ĭarnotaurus - Very straightforward. Note: apart from ranking Splash! as the easiest, plastgeek's list and mine are nothing alike. With all that said, here is my ranking of difficulty in order from easiest to hardest. The Bahamut is one of my favorite pieces, so it is not difficult for me to fold it. What makes something hard to fold? Does it mean something that is hard to fold from a certain size? (In that case the dragons are pretty hard) Does it mean something that is hard to make look good unless you use special ultra-thin paper and mold the heck out of it? (Pegasus) Does it mean something that is just not the least bit of fun to fold so you want to stop? (Blue whale) Or something with a boring fold sequence? (Wizard and Mammoth). youngsters comparing their versions of Satoshi Kamiya's Ancient Dragon. It is also the only one that I have never fully folded. The Complete Guide for Everyone: Origami Book with 16 Lessons and Downloadable.
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I would consider the Blue Whale the hardest piece in the book. First off, different people have different perceptions of difficulty. The few full diagrams in it have actually already been published before, albeit in hard-to-find. It's hard to really order them in order of difficulty. Satoshi Kamiyas new book is not a typical diagram book.