Origami Square Twist

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Intro: Origami Square Twist

The kinetic sculpture shown here is made of a much larger square of material than just a regular piece of paper, and it is made of a material that is an entire inch thick. Try folding that! It turns out that once materials start to get thicker than paper, it becomes harder and harder to fold an origami pattern. Scientists and engineers have looked into this problem and have come up with a few methods for "folding" thick materials. Actually, in most of these methods, the materials aren't folded at all; rather, they are joined by some kind of hinge or joint.

In our Kinetic sculpture, the thick panels were cut out individually, stacked as they would be in the paper model, and then we added offsets to extend the fold edges back to where they would be on the paper model. After that, we used fabric to create the hinges. This method is called the offset panel technique. Can you think of any other ways to make origami models with thick materials? Try cutting each panel from this pattern out of a piece of thick cardboard and see what you can come up with.

STEP 1: Print

Print or copy the fold pattern onto a piece of paper.

STEP 2: Cut Out

Cut along the outer edges of the square pattern.

STEP 3: Crease the Square Twist Pattern.

Following the Guidelines for Mountain/valley Folds, Crease the Square Twist Pattern.

Dotted lines = Valley folds

Solid lines = Mountain folds

STEP 4: Collapse the Pattern

Take two opposite corners and push them toward the middle, letting creases fall in their orientation.

The large square should fold down into a smaller square in the middle.

STEP 5: Get Creative!

Draw, paint, or write something (a cartoon character, a logo, a scene, etc.) on the face of the folded pattern.

STEP 6: Open the Square Twist Pattern!

Now the fun part - open the square twist pattern (you'll see your drawing be split in half and move to opposite corners) and complete the drawing or phrase on the unfolded square.

Watch the transformation as you open and close your kinetic sculpture. If it is folded correctly, you can push the sides in and out and see the square shrink and expand.

4 Comments

As mentioned in a comment, the pdf in this tutorial gives a slightly different result compared to the gif shown there. Therefore, I have edited their pdf so that it gives the same result as in the gif, for those who are interested.

(Apologies if the edited pdf is not perfectly aligned)

Shout out to Veritasium for bringing me here! :D
Really cool opening effect. The design given is different from the gif shown though, but there is more of a twisting motion in this design which I think looks more interesting.
Can you think of any other ways to make origami models with thick materials?
-Couldn't you use an integrated hinge or even rubber like material in between?
A good/neat application for this could be poster board. Easy transport, but someone have need to hide certain aspects during a presentation (depending on the project). Could be a neat science fair board.