![]() ![]() ĭragon in Flight, modified, by Charles Esseltine. printer paper, wetfolded, multiple squares. I unfortunately don't remember which book these are from, I'll have to look it up once I get back home. Interlocking Diamond Heart Rings by Jeremy Shafer. Plastic-Foil (don't ask), folded in 2008. Three-Banded Armadillo, modified to be a Nine-Banded Armadillo, by Joseph Wu. ĭollar Bill Butterfly by Michael LaFosse. This is the third practice run of this model. This was for a white elephant gift exchange. There is no additional cost to you for purchasing through this page.Elephant by Satoshi Kamiya. This hasn’t affected my decision to recommend a product – I value my personal and professional reputation and would not endorse a product or supplier I did not believe in. This page contains affiliate links and I may receive some small commission for purchases made through the links on this page. You can also subscribe to the mailing list by entering your email in the box below: Feel free to let me know what you think in the comments below, or you find can me on Instagram or Twitter. Let me know what you think, if you’ve folded this one yourself, or if you prefer a different origami Pegasus design. ![]() You can get the crease patterns for that one here. Update: Since I first published this post, Kamiya has created another more advanced pegasus, which he calls Pegasus B3. ![]() The diagrams for this model are in Satoshi Kamiya’s book Origami House (page is in Japanese, English translation is available) and is available from. It would be possible to fold this in less time, but I wanted to take my time over it. I completed this model in about five hours, spread across three days, although I wasn’t in a hurry. There are 108 steps to this model, several of which are along the lines of ‘repeat the last six steps on the other side’. Some parts of the model (particularly around the belly) are several layers thick by the end and it would be difficult to fold these well if the paper is too small. I understand that no everyone likes to work with such a large sheet of paper, but in this case I think it helped. I used a 60cm x 60cm (24in x 24in) sheet of white tissue foil bought from. 10in x 10in) sheet, but does not specify a paper type. It does require a reasonably large piece of thin paper that is coloured the same on both sides. It doesn’t demand as much skill in shaping as Joisel’s Dwarf which I covered on this blog recently, but it does demand accurate and precise folding throughout if the results are not to be disappointing. Please see disclosure for more information Note: This post contains affiliate links. To me, these are both strengths of Kamiya’s model. Discover the magic of the internet at Imgur, a community powered entertainment destination. Quite a lot of Pegasus models tend to sacrifice one of these two areas – either the finished model feels very short, or the wing doesn’t look like an actual functioning wing. The proportions work well and the wing design is excellent. This one, by Satoshi Kamiya is particularly good. There are quite a lot of origami Pegasus designs (Pegasuses? Pegasi?) around for much the same reason. I’ve remarked before on this blog that things with wings and horns tend look very good in origami, and this is probably why birds, dragons, and insects are such popular subjects. Actually tissue foil paper is awesome for this type of origami,also Kamiya took a picture of this fold using the tissue foil paper. Pegasus’s dad was Poseidon, the god of the sea, and his mom was Medusa, an evil Gorgon who had fangs and lizard skin and living snakes for hair. ![]()
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