To mark the release of Phạm Hoàng Tuấn’s new book, he released a photo sequence of a little songbird on Fakebook:
Hundreds of development photos lead you (sort of) through the exacting process of folding this little wren-like bird. I decided to throw some nice paper at it.
The suggested size the author used was 20cm, so I went 35cm square, thinking I would have been safe, but should have looked ahead as it got waaaay too thick due to layers really quickly. Not to be deterred, I thought I would try to shepherd the now clearly wrong paper through a torturous fold,
In the end, some features (like the head) were really clumsily folded due to thickness, but I am pretty happy with the number of bird-like features I was able to tease out of this lovely sheet. I was also reminded of an important lesson – choice of appropriate paper is REALLY important on complex-supercomplex models.
I posed and stabilised it as much as possible, and will prolly fold it again some other time. The photo sequence was super annoying to use – it kept timing out (google drives get lazy) and so many of the photos showed indeterminate actions at times I was left scratching my head thinking “what is actually being shown here”. Beggars cannot be choosers however, so I gave it a red hot crack.
The paper was “strategically cut, so as to leave me a full-width square remaining, allowing me to cleave 2x 1/2 width squares as well – the sheet was hand-painted washi with rainbow colours and gold brushed on, the best of the sheet is yet to come. It was nice therapy folding with nice paper however so it was not a waste of time.
The body shape reminds me a little of a fairy wren, and the finished folded size is not that different to the lifesize bird, which considering how much paper is there is pretty amazing.
Sweet lil critter… 😀