No. It's a Japanese art that involves folding sheets of paper into figures of animals or other objects. I don't think that qualifies as science (strictly speaking, though it certainly requires a lot of skill and patience) but as an art form.
You can make anything you see around you.
Topology, Solid Geometry, and Spatial Relations are.
Of course. You can make practically ANYTHING with origami. Go on youtube and type in 'Origami Rose.' A personal favorite video of mine is " How to make the Origami Rose (easy version) " Type this in the search bar on youtube then click the first suggestion that pops up.
Sure is! They love the stuff! Then again, they love just about anything!
Yes, if you are folding something, it counts as origamiIf it is created from a square piece of paper, and you do not cut anything, it is considered origami (no matter how simple).
Where can you get origami diagrams that will allow you to do super advanced origami when i have already started the origami and I am good but not good enough to make up your own origami?
I do believe the plural for 'origami' is 'origami' much like the word 'deer' it stays the same irregardless. "I have lots of origami"
Origami nut, origami club, and Jo Nakashima's YouTube channel and origami-make.com
Nick Robinson has written: 'Super quick origami animals' -- subject(s): Origami 'Origami adventures' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, Origami, Dinosaurs in art 'Origami XOXO' -- subject(s): Origami
One can find instructions on how to make an origami frog from the following sources: Origami Instructions, Wiki How, Frogs On Ice, Origami Fun, Origami Way, Origami Make.
Origami is made up of two words, ori, which means folding, and kami, which means paper. You can create pretty much anything with origami, but there are a few rules: no glue/tape, and no cutting. (The art of cutting paper, which is not nearly as popular, is called kirigami.) Some examples of what you could fold are a rose, a crane, and an inflatable balloon. A great way of learning origami is by checking the video's fo the following people on YouTube: jonakashima, tadashimori and robh0629.
the first origami was a crane