Fold it 10 times....
You get four rectangles
The last fold will be ineffective in making squares. If you fold a square in half it becomes two rectangles - one on top of the other. This "square" (pardon me, but the site doesn't do accurate 'drawing') shows the folding process. |--------------------------------| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |--------------------------------| when folded back, becomes |----------------| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |----------------| and when that is folded upwards, it becomes four squares |----------------| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |----------------| The third fold makes eight rectangles.... |--------| |..........| |..........| |..........| |..........| |--------| And the fourth fold makes sixteen squares... |--------| |..........| |..........| |--------| Another fold - a fifth - would bring us back to rectangles again. There would be 32 of them. |----| |.....| |.....| |----|
Standard copying paper is A4, fold it in half and you get a A5. Fold it in half again and you get a A6, one last fold and you got a A7. So a A7 paper is a paper with the same proportions as a A4 paper but with 1/8 of the area. A7 size is 74mm x 105mm
Fold the paper along the line. Fold the paper again so that the first fold is folded onto itself and such that the second fold goes through a specified point - if any. The second fold will represent a line that is perpendicular to the first and which passes through the specified point.
Fold the paper along the line. Fold the paper again so that the first fold is folded onto itself and such that the second fold goes through a specified point - if any. The second fold will represent a line that is perpendicular to the first and which passes through the specified point.
First fold your paper into 3 sections. After you have done that turn your paper style. Fold it into 3 sections again. Then you should get 9 sections. This is a perfect example of 3x3=9. Hope this helps!!
You get four rectangles
cut out your paper squares. To make our box we'll need two square pieces of paper. ... Fold the paper squares in half. Fold your paper into a diamond. Make the paper creases. Turn your paper square into a rectangle. Create an L with your paper. Unfold the edges.Finish your box!
The last fold will be ineffective in making squares. If you fold a square in half it becomes two rectangles - one on top of the other. This "square" (pardon me, but the site doesn't do accurate 'drawing') shows the folding process. |--------------------------------| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |........................................| |--------------------------------| when folded back, becomes |----------------| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |----------------| and when that is folded upwards, it becomes four squares |----------------| |....................| |....................| |....................| |....................| |----------------| The third fold makes eight rectangles.... |--------| |..........| |..........| |..........| |..........| |--------| And the fourth fold makes sixteen squares... |--------| |..........| |..........| |--------| Another fold - a fifth - would bring us back to rectangles again. There would be 32 of them. |----| |.....| |.....| |----|
You make a paper or cardboard net with 6 squares to form cross shape. Then you cut it out and fold it.
into squares
Fold the paper in half.
Squares are easier to fold, but all origami are not squares. Some are rectangles, and even circles. The person that created this, probably thought squares were better too.
you fold the paper in half and you fold it verticaly and you fold it verticaly again and you've got your paper plane.
Before if is folded, it will be in a straight line with sticky squares by his/ her waste. Then, you fold the fat part that is connected to his/her butt over and get the two sticky squares and fold them over to sicure the the diaper from falling!! Good luck!!
first, fold it into half equally then,fold it onto three,then fold it into two,there now!! you have a bond paper folded into twelve....
Though square is sort of the standard shape for origami, the art of paper folding can use any paper shape. However, square is the easiest shape for origami because there is only one square shape. If you were to design an object using a rectangular piece of paper, you would have to spend time measuring how long it is by how wide it is, since a rectangle can be almost any width by any length. Using square paper, it makes it easier to instruct someone else how to do it.But, with origami, any paper shape can be used.