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Artist Cristian Marianciuc began 2015 by creating a unique personal journal.

While his diary does


involve paper, it's definitely not your conventional notebook filled with thoughts, memories, and
written words. Instead, this uncommon journal incorporates the art of origami. "Late last year, I made
a decision that would see me rediscover my creativity and avoid something that had weighed very
heavily on my mind during 2014," Marianciuc tells us. "As a result of a 'quarter-life crisis' and of the
sinking feeling that days were passing me by without being able to create new memories or make use
of my creativity, and drawing inspiration from the amazing story of Sadako Sasaki, and her quest to
fold 1000 paper cranes in order to be granted a wishmy origami journal was born."
Since the artist's origami journey began, he's created 314 paper cranes. Each work of paper art is
designed so that it mirrors the type of day Marianciuc is having. Aside from the cranes serving as a
visual memory, the artist's pieces also demonstrate the power of one's imagination. Some cranes
incorporate the environment with flowers and feathers. Others utilize colored pencils, paint, wire, and
complex folding techniques. This culminates in an origami series that's as expressive as it is
meaningful. http://www.mymodernmet.com/profiles/blogs/cristian-marianciuc-origami-journal

My Modern Met granted permission to use photos by Cristian Marianciuc.

By Anna Gragert November 10, 2015

Artis Cristian Marianciuc mulai 2015 dengan menciptakan sebuah jurnal pribadi yang un
ik. Sementara hariannya melibatkan kertas, hal
ini pasti tidak notebook Anda konvensional diisi dengan pikiran, kenangan, dan menulis
kata. Sebaliknya, jurnal ini jarang menggabungkan seni origami. "Akhir tahun lalu, saya
membuat keputusan yang akan melihat saya menemukan
kembali kreativitas saya dan menghindari sesuatuyang telah ditimbang sangat berat di pi
kiran saya selama 2014," Marianciuc mengatakan. "Sebagai hasil 'krisis kuartal-
hidup' dan tenggelamnya merasa bahwa hari itumelewatiku tanpa mampu menciptakan k
enangan baru atau membuat menggunakan kreativitas saya, dan menggambar inspirasi da
ri kisah luar
biasa Sadako Sasaki, dan upaya untuk melipat kertas 1000 Crane untuk diberikan keingin
an jurnal origami saya lahir."
Sejak seniman origami perjalanan dimulai, ia
telah menciptakan 314 kertas Crane. Setiap karya seni kertas dirancang sehingga ini men
cerminkan jenis hari Marianciuc adalah memiliki. Selain crane yang melayani sebagai m
emori visual, potongan-
potongan artis juga menunjukkan kekuatan imajinasi seseorang. Crane beberapa mengga
bungkan lingkungan dengan bunga dan bulu. Orang
lain menggunakan berwarna pensil, cat, kawat, dan teknik-
teknik kompleks lipat. Ini memuncak dalam origami seriyang ekspresif seperti itu berma
kna

Robert J. Lang Origami http://www.langorigami.com/article/paper


Found Paper
One of the things that first attracted me to origami as a child was that the tools were all
around me; all I needed were my hands and a sheet of paper, and I could find paper
anywhere! For many years, I used pads of obsolete business forms from my Dad's
business, cut to square. Nowadays, the equivalent paper would be copy paperused or
unused. And all it needs is to be cut (or torn) to square, and you're ready to fold.
For simple folds, copy paper works very well. It takes a crease nicely and doesn't easily
wrinkle. And you can find it almost everywhere. But as the world of origami has
progressed over the last few decades, the complexity of origami designs has grown, and
for many designsand almost everything I compose these dayscopy paper is just too
thick. You'll need to look for other sources.

Magazine and Newsprint


Even more ubiquitous than copy paper is magazine paper and newsprint. Both are
tempting, particularly because they are generally much thinner than copy paper. But if
you try them out, you'll find that magazine paper and newsprint are really lousy papers
for origami. They have two big weaknesses: they are weak (and so tear easily), and even
worse, they don't hold creases very well at all.

Second Sheet, Manifold, and Airmail Paper


For many years, my paper of choice was a type called "second sheet" or "manifold."
These names came from the days before copy machines, when business forms came in
packets of several sheets with carbon paper between the layers, so that when you filled
out the form you were making multiple copies. Manifold paper was quite thin (9 lb.,
using the American system of paper weights; see here for conversions), but unlike
newsprint and magazine paper, it was crisp and took creases nicely. Alas, multicarbon
forms seem to be a casualty of the commercial photocopier. Although I'm still working
on the first 1000-sheet ream of manifold that I ever bought, it's been a long time since
I've seen it in stationery stores. But airmail paper is very similarthin, crisp, and
strongand email has yet to kill it off.

Traditional Origami Paper


I regularly get asked, "do you have to use that special Japanese origami paper that comes
in the little square packages?" It's true, there is paper made especially for origami, and
most art or craft stores carry it. It's relatively thin, brightly colored (most packages
contain an assortment of colors), and, conveniently, it is already cut to square. (Or nearly
so; more on that in a minute.) It seems like this paper must be the ideal paper for origami,
possibly made by hand according to ancient tradition and used for origami for perhaps
hundreds of years!
The truth is somewhat less inspiring. What we think of as traditional origami paper
generally called kamiwas actually developed in the early 20th century for use in
schools, using inexpensive, western-style machine-made paper. It was colored on one
side, because that's cheaper. The paper is not archival, and the dyes are unstable, so it
degrades over a period of years. And while it is fairly thin (thus using less material,
making it cheaper per sheet), it is not very strong, as generations of folders attempting to
use it to fold insects, can attest!
And it is not always square, to boot. This is not necessarily due to imprecision in
manufacturing, though. Kami, like all machine-made papers, has a definite grain, which
comes from the manufacturing process. It is made on a continous belt moving through a
paper pulp slurry, and the motion of the belt tends to align the paper fibers along a given
direction. (You can easily see the effect of this alignment by trying to tear a sheet of
newspaper; it will tear much more cleanly in one direction (with the grain) than the other
(across the grain).) Paper absorbs moisture from the air, and a change in humidity will
cause a slight change in the size of the paper. But because of the grain, machine-made
papers swell more in one direction than the other. That means that even if the paper was
square when it left the factory, it might not be square when you open the package if the
humidity is different where you live.
So kami is not very stable, not very strong, and maybe not very square. Why use it at all?
Tradition, and convenience. There is a history of using kami for origami; many folders
honor that tradition by continuing to do so. And it's convenient to be able to just pull out
a sheet and start folding, square or not. (And for many folds, being half a millimeter out
of square is not going to make a significant difference.) Kami is most commonly
available in two standard sizes: 6 inch (15 cm) and 10 inch (25 cm), and these are so
common that if you ask any origami person, "hey, do ya have a square of six-inch on
ya?" they'll know exactly what you mean. (At least in America, where we still use
inches.) But if you look around, you can find it as small as 1" and as large as 15", and
nowadays, there is an enormous variety of colors, patterns, gradations, and prints.
(A side note on terminology. The word kami is Japanese, and simply means "paper." The
word "origami" is derived from oru, meaning "to fold," and kami, meaning paper. So, to
a Japanese speaker, the word kami can refer to any type of paper. However, in English-
speaking countries, kami is used informally in a narrower sense to refer to the pre-cut
packaged squares, no matter where they come from.)
One drawback of kami is shared by most of the other papers I've talked about. It's very
difficult to make curved surfaces. For the paper to take a crease cleanly, it should be a bit
springy; and if it's a bit springy, and you try to curve it, the springiness will straighten out
the curve. (There is a folding genre, called "curved tension folding," that overcomes this
problem by creating locking mechanisms in the folding.) In the early days of modern
folding, that didn't matter; most origami was flat. You could close every figure in a book,
and so curves weren't even contemplated. But as people became more familiar with the
works of the great 20th-century Japanese origami master Akira Yoshizawa, works that
were delicate, 3-dimensional, organic, and curved, people realized that curved folds and
3-dimensional shaping were major elements of artistic folding. Traditional papers didn't
allow this type of shaping (and Yoshizawa didn't use traditional papers for much of his
folding). This led origami artists, individually and collectively, on a journey: the quest
for the perfect paper! In the next couple of pages, I'll discuss some of the candidates.

Metallic Papers
Foil Paper
Paper-folders are often inveterate problem-solvers; following an origami diagram
sequence is like solving a series of little puzzles. One of the biggest problems facing the
origami artist seeking to fold three-dimensional and/or curved shapes in the middle 20th
century was, how can one routinely make curved folds in arbitrary places and have them
stay put? Because the springiness of the paper (or its slower relaxation over time) took
out any curves that weren't locked into position. Some origami artists developed
techniques that utilized locking folds to hold curved shapes under tension; Joseph Wu
and Leong Cheng Chit are two modern folders who specialize in this technique. But
during the 1960s and 1970s, this problem faced a great many folders who were seeking
to advance the natural appearance of their own works.
At least by the 1960s, a solution was found: foil-backed papera material that to this
day is bound to provoke controversy and harsh words among origami aficionados. Foil-
backed paper, usually called "foil paper" or even just "foil", is a laminate: a thin sheet of
paper, bonded to an even thinner sheet of (usually) aluminum foil. Many artist supply
stores carry large sheets of it (usually in silver and gold), but it can most commonly and
easily be found as wrapping paper. When I was young, the day after Christmas found
most people exchanging gifts and buying toys on sale, but it found me hitting all the
Christmas shops to buy the unsold wrapping paper at 50% off! Nowadays, you can also
buy foil paper packaged and pre-cut to squares from the same people who bring you pre-
cut kami.
Foil paper is often quite thin and is usually fairly strong, but the big property that it
brings to the origami artist is that it is malleable. Or rather, the metal part is malleable.
This means you can shape the paper into curves and crimps, and it will hold its shape.
Thus, foil paper allows one to fold curved, organic shapes that have a much more natural
appearance.
Or at least they do if you consider "shiny and metallic" to be natural. (For certain beetles,
it is.) A big drawback of folding with foil is that the shinyness gives the folded figure a
harsh, cold look, and the irregular reflections from the surface are distracting and give a
cluttered appearance to figures folded from it. Nevertheless, it can be an acceptable
tradeoff, given the ease of manipulation. The 1970s were the heyday of foil; its
suitability for complexity (due to its strength and thinness) and shaping (due to the metal)
led to major advances in origami designs by Elias, Rohm, Crawford, Hulme, and others.
People either ignored the shininess, or folded so that the colored side was mostly hidden
and the white side faced out. White was bland, but it was an improvement over shiny
metal. And several folders (notably Mark Kennedy) developed techniques for dyeing the
white side with colors and patterns, which allowed one to combine curved folding and
shaping with more naturalor at least, more interestingcolor choices.
Even today, I still use a lot of foil paperfor practice, not display. Its combination of
thinness, strength, and malleability makes it the most forgiving all-around paper when
I'm developing a new design. For large squares, I buy large (20"x30") sheets from art
stores; for smaller squares, I buy pre-packaged squares. A good mail-order supplier of
foil is OrigamiUSA's The Source. OrigamiUSA sells two kinds of foil, labeled
"Japanese" and "American" foil. Unfortunately, American foil, like "American cheese",
is an ersatz imitation of the real thing. "Japanese foil" is what you want. If you happen to
be in the San Francisco Bay Area, you should stop at The Paper Tree on Buchanan Mall;
they carry one of the largest varieties of foil and kami around, along with books and
other Japanese goodies.

Tissue Foil
In my own designs in the early 1980s, I found that the malleability of foil paper was nice,
but it wasn't malleable enough. If I was folding an insect and needed to compress the legs
to thinness, even with foil paper, they still sprang apart. The problem was that the
springiness of the paper overcame the malleability of the foil. What I needed was a foil
paper that was a bit more foil and a bit less paper.
Nothing like what I wanted was available in stores; I would have to make my own. Not
having access to a paper factory, I improvised. Using artist's spray adhesive, I laminated
sheets of tissue paper to one or both sides of a sheet of household aluminum foil. The
resulting material was quite remarkable: I could easily make curves and rounded shapes
that held their shape. Furthermore, I could compress insect legs to a remarkable degree,
allowing me to realize the contrast between the rounded body and the narrow legs and
antennae to a degree I'd never previously been able to achieve. And by using different
colorsand even patternsof tissue paper, I could also achieve a wide variety of colors
and textures in the paper. When I used thin tissue, the shininess of the foil showed
slightly through the paper, but far from being an annoyance, it actually created a slightly
iridescent effect that was quite pleasing.
If you'd like to make this paper yourself, it's quite easy. You'll need:

a roll of household aluminum foil


several sheets of tissue paper (or similarly thin paper)
a can of artist's spray adhesive
some newspaper
a roller or artist's brayer
a sharp knife or scissors.

You'll also need a location with no wind but where you can insure good ventilation; the
fumes from the spray adhesive are pretty nasty. (I use my garage and then open the door
when I'm done to let it air out.) Here's what works for me:

1. Lay down a sheet of newspaper or two to cover an area larger than the sheet you're
making.
2. Give a light spritz of the adhesive over the newspaper so that it's just the tiniest bit tacky;
this will hold down the foil.
3. Unroll a sheet of foil from your roll; lay it down over the newspaper. Smooth it down
with your hands, working from one side so that it doesn't wrinkle.
4. Spray the foil with a uniform layer of the adhesive. You should cover it thoroughly; there
should be no shiny spots left. It's okay to overlap the edges of the foil; that's what the
newspaper is for.
5. Take a sheet of tissue paper and "waft" it over the sprayed foil, letting it settle over the
foil, starting from one edge. You only get one shot at this: as soon as the tissue touches
the foil, it is stuck and removal is very difficult to do without introducing buckles and
wrinkles! Let the tissue settle over the foil, using your hands or the roller to smooth it
down, working in a single direction, to minimize the formation of pockets (which will
become wrinkles).
6. Lift (or cut) the two-layer sandwich free; turn it over and set it, tissue side down, on
another sheet of newspaper.
7. Repeat steps 45 with another sheet of tissue foil.
8. Again, cut the sandwich free. Lay it down on yet another sheet of newspaper and go over
it everywhere with your roller to eliminate any air pockets (they will become wrinkles,
but hopefully, they will be few and far between).
9. Cut the material to square, and fold away!
I wrote up this material, now called "tissue foil," in British Origami Magazine in the
mid-1980s and began using it in my display models at conventions at about the same
time. And for one reason or another, the material caught on and developed a following
that continues to this day. I don't know if I was the first to try thisthe concept of
laminating paper for origami goes back to Yoshizawa (as does so much in our art)and
in retrospect, it seems like a fairly obvious thing to do, but I did play some role in
popularizing it. As with many technological developments, others have expanded and
refined the concept in subsequent years, trying different adhesives, different gauge
metals for the filling, different backing papers for the outside, and a variety of post-
folding glazes and treatments. (For some of the most amazing origami that is paper-foil
laminate at heart, see Eric Joisel's web page.
For a couple of years, I played with my new-found toy of tissue foil, folding everything I
could from this amazing but recalcitrant material. It looks great, but is very hard to work
with for complex folds. Because it is so malleable, precreasinga staple maneuver of
complex origamiis very problematic. With most papers, any crease permanently
weakens the paper, so that once you've made a valley fold and unfolded it, if you
subsequently make either a valley or mountain fold, it tends to form on the existing fold.
With tissue foil, three problems arise:

If you unfold a valley fold, the paper does not easily open out flat, but leaves behind a
small pucker where the valley fold was. You have to run your fingernail or some other
hard smooth object over the fold to fully remove it.
Once you've removed the fold, there is truly no trace of it; making a new fold, there is no
tendency of the fold to form in the location of the original valley fold. This property
eliminates the value of pre-creasing for "setting up" a subsequent complicated collapse.
If you haven't completely removed the valley fold and you try to make a mountain fold at
the same location, the mountain fold will form on one side or the other of the original
valley fold; in other words, it will fall somewhere that is guaranteed to be not where you
want it! This contrariness can be extremely frustrating.

Despite its annoyances, I folded with tissue foil almost exclusively for several years. But
not any more. As I got over my initial infatuation, I eventually began to perceive
problems in this material.
There was the precreasing problem, of course, but that could be overcome with time and
care. I also found that my figures tended to change color and fade over time, as the
unstable dyes in the cheap tissue I was using faded. And sometimes, the paper would
delaminate from the foil, as the spray adhesive I'd used also degraded. Both of those
could be mitigated by using better-quality materials. But a deeper problem lay in the
inherent malleability of the material. Tissue-foil would change its shape under my hands
during the folding process; but it would also change its shape for the rest of time, due to
the small bumps and nudges of transportation and handling. This property became
particularly apparent when I flew across the country for an origami exhibition. What
went into the box as a pristine work of art arrived (after the tender mercies of airline
baggage handlers) a dimpled, crumpled mess. In fact, tissue foil as a medium created a
new bonding ritual among its practitioners when we set up our exhibitions: pull the
figures out, then start laboriously straightening the legs and smoothing the dimples
incurred in travel. But not everything could be straightened out, and my folded works
inevitably degraded over time. I eventually reached the point where the crumples and
dimples of tissue foil dominated my view of my own figures. And so, I quit using it.
At the same time I was folding with tissue foil, I had been exploring other papers and
folding techniques, and one, in particular, I'd heard good things about: it was called "wet-
folding." By the time I had my falling-out with tissue foil, I had learned to use this new
technique, and on the next page, I'll tell you about it and the papers that let you exploit it.

Wet-folding Paper
When the great Japanese master Akira Yoshizawa began visiting the West in the latter
half of the twentieth century, his audiences were astounded at the organic, lifelike forms
he had created. Much of the magic arose from his folding technique; rather than making
every crease sharp, he incorporated soft creases, curved creases, and gentle, rounded
forms. And yet, despite the softness of form, the folded figures themselves were often
rigid, almost shell-like; they easily withstood the rigors of travel and retained their
original form. The secret was a folding technique invented by Yoshizawa, called wet-
folding.
Nowadays the term "wet-folding" is used to refer to any of a family of techniques, and
the original techniques developed by Yoshizawa have been expanded upon by many
artists. The common element to all members of the family of wet-folding is the
application of water to the paper to soften it during the folding process. This allows the
formation of both soft and sharp creases and lets you easily form curved surfaces; then
when the paper dries, it retains its shape, becoming rigid and resilient. With thin papers,
wet-folding allows one to compress multi-layered flaps to a much finer degree than with
dry folding, allowing a much more realistic expression for legs and antennae in
arthropodic subjects. I took up wet-folding over 20 years ago, and over the years, have
become enthralled by its capacity for variation and expression, to the point that
nowadays, nearly everything I fold for display and most of the figures on this site are
wet-folded.
There are now many different papers for wet-folding and many different styles of wet-
folding. While you don't need to know a lot to wet-fold, if you're planning on exploring
the technique, it is helpful to understand why it works, if only to understand why some
papers work and other papers don't.
The thing that enables wet-folding is sizing. Sizing is a water-soluble adhesive that is
sometimesadded to the paper pulp during its manufacture. The sizing agent acts to
bond the fibers of the paper together as the paper dries, resulting in a stronger, crisper
sheet. Paper manufacturers use different types and amounts of sizing in their papers,
depending on the properties they're after.
For the origami folder, sizing is what makes wet-folding work. When you dampen the
paper, the water dissolves the sizing, making the paper softer and more malleable; when
the paper dries, the sizing bonds the paper fibers together in their new configuration,
making the resulting shape permanent. The more sizing there is in the paper, the greater
the contrast between foldability when wet, and rigidity when dry. Thus, wet-folding
requires usage of sized papers, and the greater the amount of sizing in the paper, the
more suitable that paper is for wet-folding.
So, how (short of interrogating the manufacturer) do you tell if a paper has enough sizing
to make it good for wet-folding? There are a couple of answers, but the easiest is, with a
little experience, you can tell by feel, particularly with thick papers. If the paper feels
fairly stiff, crisp, and a little springy, then it probably has been sized. You can also
experiment: dampen a sheet (by wiping with a damp cloth); if it becomes noticeably
easier to manipulate, then the dampness has dissolved the sizing, and it will probably be
good for wet-folding as well.
You can also just work with known good wet-folding papers. Perhaps the most readily
available paper that works well for wet-folding is watercolor paper, available from many
art stores in a variety of colors. I particularly like the Canson Mi-Teintes brand, which
comes in a wide range of colors and has a nice surface texture. I've also found that
calligraphy parchment works very well for wet-folding; its only drawback is that the
range of colors is somewhat limited.
However, my favorite thick paper, by far, is Wyndstone Marble paper (in Europe, this is
sold under the name Zanders Elephant Hide). This paper is very dense and smooth, and
has a mottled appearance that looks like marble (hence one of its names). It becomes
very malleable when damp, very rigid when dry, and is fairly resistant to getting fuzzy
along folded edges (a hazard of the technique). (Interestingly, because of its elegant
appearance and springiness when dry, Wyndstone Marble is a favorite paper for "dry
tension folding", a completely different style in which curved surfaces are held in place
by folded locks). It is available from many art stores and numerous sources on the
Internet.
Whatever the paper, if it is relatively thick, you can use a similar approach for all such
papers. I'll describe my own technique here; other folders have their own favored
variations. I use the following tools:

A damp cloth (I prefer disposable dishclothes, which I discard when they get dirty);
A bowl of water (to dampen the cloth);
A cutting mat, sharp knife, metal-edged ruler, and triangle (for cutting squares).

When I start to fold, I dampen the cloth, then use it to wipe the surface of the paper to
dampen the paper. The most important aspect of the whole process is the dampness of
the paper. Too little, and the paper will be too stiff; curves will spring apart, and sharp
creases will break along the fold line. On the other hand, if the paper is too damp, that's
even worse; the paper will start to come apart, getting fuzzy along creases and potentially
splitting at stress points. The optimum level of dampness gives the paper the feeling of
leather; a bit floppy, but not soggy. If the surface is shiny, that's too wet; set the paper
aside and let it dry a bit to bring it back to the right consistency.
Starting out, you must get the paper to the right stage of dampness; thereafter, you'll
periodically redampen parts as they dry out. I usually find that three complete wipes gets
it to the right stage to start; wipe one side, turn the paper over, wipe the other side in the
opposite direction, then flip the paper over and re-wipe the first side. Of course, this
depends on how damp you made the cloth to begin with. I usually start by dunking the
cloth, then I wring it out enough that if I hold it loosely crumpled, it doesn't drip.
The reason for the cutting supplies in the list of materials is that it's better to cut the paper
to square after you have dampened it. All of the papers I've mentioned above are
machine-made papers, and all machine-made papers have a grain, which means that
when wet, they swell anisotropically. If you cut a square dry and then dampen it, it will
become noticeably non-square. It is a great disappointment to make your first fold along
the diagonal and find that the corners no longer line up! So I always cut my paper a little
larger than I need, dampen it, then quickly cut it to the proper square and begin folding.
As you fold, the paper will be constantly drying out at a rate that depends on where you
live. (Here in California, it's pretty fast.) You'll have to keep an eye (or rather, a feel) on
the dampness/stiffness of the paper, and re-dampen parts as they dry. Edges and corners
tend to dry out faster than the middle of the paper. Once you've folded very much, some
of the layers will become inaccessible to re-dampening, so I find that I pretty much have
to fold a figure in one straight shot (which can necessitate 6 or 8 hours of straight
folding; no coffee beforehand). If the figure won't hold its shape on its own, you can hold
the paper into position while it dries, a process you can hasten by holding it in the
airstream of a hair dryer. (However, this technique must be used carefully; if the figure
dries nonuniformly, it is likely to warp and buckle.) I also use strips of drafting tape to
hold things into position as they dry. Once the figure is fully dried, it will be quite rigid,
and will hold its shape for a long time to come.

Back-coating
Wet-folding as I have described it requires heavily-sized, fairly thick papers. There are
many beautiful papers in the world, but relatively few of them are suitable for wet-
folding because they are too thin, lack sizing, or both. Furthermore, there are many
origami figures that exploit the two colors on opposite sides of the paper. Traditional
origami paper is colored differently on the two sides, but most art papers are not.
Yoshizawa developed a folding paper that solves all three problems at once: in English-
speaking countries, the technique is called back-coating. it consists of gluing two thin
sheets of paper together using a water-soluble adhesive. The result is thick enough to
wet-fold, can be colored differently on each side of the paper, and best of all, the
adhesive material acts as the sizing agent, permitting the resulting sandwich to be wet-
folded.
To backcoat two sheets of paper, you need two thin sheets, a flat surface, and a water-
soluble paste; wheat starch is a common material. The first sheet is glued down to the flat
surface around its edges, using a bit of the paste. The top surface is then coated with the
paste, and the second sheet laid down over it. The entire sandwich is rolled to eliminate
any air bubbles and to insure a good joint between the sheets; then the result is allowed
to dry. (Gluing the first sheet down by its edges is a necessary step; it holds the paper flat
during drying. Without this step, the paper would curl and buckle as it dries.) When the
entire sandwich is dry, it is cut away from the backing, and trimmed to square. From
there, one can wet-fold the material as described above.

Resizing
Backcoating allows one to wet-fold a much larger variety of papers, including a huge
variety of art papers from all over the world. However, it necessarily results in a sheet
that is twice as thick as the paper you start with. For many origami figures, that's not a
problem. But for the most complex figuresinsects, spiders, crustacea, and anything
with a great deal of detailthe added thickness is not tolerable. One would like to be
able to apply the techniques of wet-folding to single sheets, and quite thin ones at that.
On the surface, wet-folding and thin paper would seem to be at cross purposes. After all,
in wet-folding, we rely on the thickness of the paper to help the model hold its shape.
Furthermore, many of the beautiful thin papers that are available have little or no sizing
at all. While sizing is normally incorporated into the paper during the manufacturing
process, it is also possible re-apply sizing to the sheet even after manufacture, thus
allowing wet-folding and a remarkable degree of shaping.
The most common sizing agent used when resizing a sheet is a material called
methylcellulose; it is also called bookbinder's paste and is a major ingredient in
wallpaper paste. (In fact, as a thickener, it is an ingredient in a lot of other things too,
ranging from cough syrup to fast-food milkshakes.) Paper itself is made from cellulose;
Methylcellulose is cellulose that has been chemically altered to make it water-soluble.
Because it is chemically inert and water soluble, it is often used in paper conservation;
aging studies have shown little change over decades.
Methylcellulose, or MC, comes as a white powder that must be dissolved in water,
forming a solution that can range in consistency from cough syrup (of course) to "alien
slime." (In fact, Hollywood studios use the stuff by the case for exactly that purpose.) To
resize a sheet of paper (or to size a sheet that was never sized to begin with), you simply
paint a solution of MC over the sheet, allow it to soak in, then dry.
A small complication is that with many papers, and most thin papers, the solution of MC
will soak through the paper and wick between the sheet and your backing surface, thus
gluing the paper down permanently. To avoid this problem, I do my resizing on a sheet
of glass (a trick I learned from origami and paper artist Michael LaFosse, more on whom
in a minute). I tack down the sheet with a little MC around its edges; then paint more
over the entire sheet, smoothing out any ripples and rolling out any bubbles; then let the
whole thing dry. When it's dry, you can peel the entire sheet cleanly off of the glass. MC
is a nice resizing agent because it soaks in completely; the top surface will look the same
as it did before you started. The bottom side will have shiny spots, which comes from the
polished surface of the glass. You can either fold the paper with this side inside, or if it
will be exposed, wiping the paper with a barely damp cloth will take off the shininess
without actually dampening the paper (which would introduce ripples).
Wet-folding with resized thin papers calls for a different folding technique. The paper
itself is too thin to sustain dampening it completely before folding. Therefore, I usually
fold the paper dry as far as possible; then when it comes time to shape, I selectively
dampen just the part that is getting the shaping, using a fine paintbrush dipped in water.
These figures can be extraordinarily delicate once dampened, so I often fold a single
body part, then let it dry completely before going to the next part. Folding a figure in this
fashion can take literally days until it's complete, but the results are well-worth the effort;
most of the insects on this site were folded using this technique. Instead of using plain
water, you can also dissolve some MC in the water used for dampening; this will add
additional strength to thin features after it has soaked in and dried.

Sizing Agents
Methylcellulose is probably the most common sizing agent used in wet-folding, but there
are several others. Less easily obtained is Sodium Carboxymethylcellulose, a.k.a. CMC.
Chemically, CMC is more polar than MC, which makes it bind more tightly to the
cellulose fibers of the paper. In layman's terms, the paper is stiffer when it dries. Even
stronger than MC and CMC are the various starch-based adhesives, with wheat starch
being the most common. All three are used in book conservation and have a good record
of longevity. However, starch-based adhesives are attractive to vermin; no origami will
survive being chewed to death by insects. Wheat flour is about 10% protein, which
makes it particularly attractive to our multi-legged friends; MC and CMC are relatively
inert (and I only use them in my own work). In any case, a few mothballs tipped into the
storage box will keep the nasties away.
Thin Papers
Now that you know what to do with them: what thin papers should you use? There is an
enormous variety of wonderful thin papers from around the worldfar too many for me
to discuss. But I will mention here a few of my favorites.
Many of the good thin papers for folding are handmade, and most of them are made from
plant fibers other than wood pulp. In general, you should avoid papers made from wood
pulp (which takes in the vast majority of the paper made in the world). Wood pulp for
paper is made by grinding up wood chips by one of two processes. Thermo-mechanical
processing (TMP) primarily uses heat, steam, and grinding to break the chips down into
individual fibers; chemical pulp uses acid and other harsh chemistry to break down the
cellulose and lignins (and incidentally, gives paper mills their distinctive, and long-
ranging, smell). TMP must grind the chips into small bits for the steam to do its work,
and so, despite its (relative) environmental friendliness, the paper fibers are shorter and
weaker than those in chemical pulp. Most commercial paper is made of a blend of the
two, with lower grades (like newsprint) having a higher proportion of the short-fibered
TMP pulp.
Short fibers are bad for folding, and they are really bad for thin papers for folding. Thin
papers usually mean complex figures, and complex figures usually mean the paper will
be put under stress, and stressed short-fiber paper tends to split, leading to even more-
stressed origami artists. Fortunately, many of the most interesting art papers are not made
from wood pulp; instead, they are made from various plant fibers. Owing to either the
nature of the plant, or the relatively more benign process used to extract the fibers from
the plant, these types of pulp can have very long fibers, giving paper that is thin, uniform,
and strong. As an added bonus, pulps provided for artisan papers are usually carefully
pH-balanced and contain none of the lignins common in wood-pulp papers (which turn
yellow fairly quickly). A pH-balanced paper (so-called "acid free") will not degrade over
time; in fact, artifacts made from handmade paper have been found in Japan that are over
1000 years old!
Occasionally, you will find that paper has been labeled by the pulp from which it is
made. Common plant source fibers include mulberry, which is the traditional material for
most Japanese handmade paper. The Japanese name for mulberry is kozo, and some of
the best papers in the world are made from it in Japan. A similar plant fiber is gampi,
which produces another high-quality paper. Korea also has a tradition of handmade
paper, using kozo fiber. They don't call it that, of course; the Korean word for such
handmade paper is hanji; I use a great deal of hanji in my own folding, and you can find
various sources for it on the web. Other papers made from mulberry include unryu; there
are many varieties, so you're best off to find a store where you can browse the paper
directly and examine its thickness, crispness, and other feel.
One of the most interesting plant fiber papers for origami comes from Nepal; the plant,
and the paper, is called lokta. There are numerous sources for lokta paper on the web,
and I've also found it in the occasional art store. I don't know if it's due to the fiber, or the
specific process they use in Nepal, but lokta sheets often have a subtle mottling to them
that is just distinct enough to be interesting but not so bold as to be distracting. The
thickness of the sheet is highly variable. In fact, the thickness can vary substantially
across a single sheet. This makes it a bit of a challenge to fold, especially if the thick part
of the sheet shows up in a part of the figure that should be thin, but a little advance
planning can avoid that. For some models, it's just the thing: the Bull Moose in the
heading of this website was folded from lokta. One caution: at least some of
the lokta I've seen is dyed in garish colors that are almost certainly unstable dyes; this
calls into question the color stability of the entire line.

Origamido Paper
I have, naturally, saved the best for last. Without question, the best thin paper for origami
in the entire world comes from Haverhill, Massachusetts, from the Origamido Studio,
home base of Michael LaFosse. Michael is well-known as one of the world's great
origami masters. But he is also a master paper-maker, and over the years he along with
his partner Richard Alexander has developed recipes and techniques for making paper
for origami that is thin, strong, crisp, takes a crease, and isn't overly weakened by
folding; in short, it's as close to perfection as I've ever seen. Michael primarily makes
paper for his own works, but a couple of times a year, he makes paper available for sale
to the rest of us. It's only in stock occasionallyand when it is, the world's origami
artists fairly quickly buy him outbut if you're serious about folding complex figures,
hie yourself over to Origamido, and try folding the very best. All the papers are pH-
balanced. Even more important, the colors come from mineral pigments rather than
(potentially unstable) dyes. This paper will last a lifetime.
That's a rapid tour through the range of papers for artistic origami. Not a complete tour,
by any means, but a sampling of what's available and what to do with it. But it's possible
to fold many things other than paper, and it's possible to fold things considerably outside
the breadbox-size range of most artistic origami. In the next section, I'll touch on a few
other folding media used for special purposes.

Novelty Papers
Origami includes many genres: one uncut square (the most common form), many uncut
squares (which takes in both modular and composite origami), triangles, rectangles, even
the occasional slitted shape. The common element of origami is that folding is the
primary means of creating the form. And it's usually paper. But not always.
In fact, many materials can be folded using the techniques of origami; all that is required
is that the material come in sheets and that it can form creases. Within that broad
category, a wide range of materials have been folded over the years with results that are
novel, interestingand sometimes even delicious.

Cloth
Cloth would seem an unlikely subject for origami, because most cloth won't take a
crease. But in fact, there is an entire genre of origami that uses cloth: napkin folding.
Many people have probably attended formal dinners where the cloth napkin was folded
into a bird-of-paradise or other decorative shape. This version of the art goes back
hundreds of years in Europe; it is mentioned in a book, "Il Trinciante" by Vincenzo
Cervio which was published in 1581! (There is no known connection between
Renaissance napkin-folding and the Japanese paper-folding tradition, but cloth napkin
folding is arguably as old as the Japanese art of origami itself. Origami researcher Joan
Sallas has traced European napkin folds back to the 1600s, including the first recorded
use of the terms "Mountain Fold" and "Valley Fold" in this context.)
Today you can find many books and articles giving techniques for folding napkins into
various decorative shapes. All that is required is a fairly heavy, stiff cloth, like a linen
napkin. Even so, such material does not hold creases very well, and only relatively
simple shapes can be folded therefrom. Starching a cloth makes it stiffer and more able
to hold a crease, and more complicated forms can be folded. (Not too surprising; adding
starch to cloth to make it stiffer is analogous to adding sizing to paper to make it stiffer.)
Samuel L. Randlett's landmark book, The Art of Origami, showed several plates of
elaborate pleated forms created with starched cloth. In more recent time, origami
tessellation artist Chris K. Palmer has created elaborate patterns of intersecting pleats in
thin raw silk, patterns reminiscent of Moorish tilings. Chris's technique, using tiny
stitches to gather and hold the pleats while using steam and pressure to set the folds, is
described in his book, Shadowfolds. This is similar to a technique uncovered by Eric
Joisel, which has been practiced by F. Ciment Pleating, a family firm for over a hundred
years. In their approach, cloth is sandwiched between two sheets of paper; the entire
sandwich is pleated in an elaborate pattern, then pressed and steamed to set the folds;
then the paper is peeled away, leaving the pleated cloth form.
Cloth napkins are now only seen in formal settings; they have been replaced by paper
napkins in everyday life. Not surprisingly, many of the folds suitable for cloth napkins
can be replicated with paper ones. But there are also folds that are especially well-suited
to paper napkins, which makes them also good folds for impromptu demonstrations of
origami when there is nothing else around. One of my favorites is Vincent Floderer's
Mushroom. (Alas, I am not aware of any published instructions for this, but Vincent is a
common presence at origami conventions and frequently teaches it in his workshops.)

Edibles
All this talk of dinner settings leads naturally to the next novelty material: edible
origami. The general rule of origami is, if a material is sheet-like and accepts a crease, it
can be folded into something. Sometimes, it can be eaten, too!
Edible sheets for origami should be thin, of course, and flexible; many materials meet
these criteria. The tougher criterion is that it should take a crease. Most edible sheets are
not very forgiving of creases. Flour tortillas can be folded into simple shapes if they are
steamed first; otherwise, they tend to crack. I have also heard of people using won ton
wrappers for folding. One of the more interesting, but finicky materials, is phyllo pastry,
which is extremely thin, but becomes incredibly brittle once it dries out. It also tears
easily in one direction; for that reason, when I've folded from it I use two sheets. The
first is laid down, brushed with melted butter (which acts as a glue), then the second
sheet is laid crosswise. The resulting sandwich is cut to square and foldedquickly,
before it dries and cracks. The folded figure is then baked to a light golden brown.
(Baking is also the appropriate finishing treatment for tortilla folds.) In general, simple
folds work best, like flowers or geometric shapes. However, a particularly impressive
display comes from folding the aforementioned phyllo sandwich into the traditional
Japanese crane. Other edible materials can be folded; I've had some fun with "fruit
leather" (although it tends to stick to itself). I should also mention David
Lister's discussion of icing sugar origami. The nice thing about all of these materials is
that you can eat your mistakes.

Metal
Origami artists are familiar with folding metal as part of foil paper or tissue-foil
laminates and their ilk. While these materials include paper as part of the sandwich, it is
also possible to fold metal directly. The closest to traditional paper folding is to use thin
foil, such as household aluminum foil. It is very difficult to fold this material neatly,
however; all but the simplest origami from foil ends up looking wrinkled and cluttered.
(The paper in foil paper or laminates provides much-needed stiffness that helps resist
small-scale wrinkles.)
Heavier-gauge metal resists wrinkling better and provides a sturdier folded product in the
end. However, it is harder to work with and only simple shapes can be folded. One artist,
Joe Spears, has found an elegant solution; he creates origami shapes from heavy-gauge
steel, cutting them apart into facets and then welding the facets back together along the
folds. Another artist, Lane Allen, has developed a folding style he calls "origane," based
on folding from metal mesh. The mesh can be folded into surprisingly complex shapes
and can be curved like wet-folding, but provides substantial structural rigidity (and a
pleasing heft).
A third possibility is to fold from paper and then replicate the folded shape in metal,
which is how I and my collaborators created my origami bronze and stainless steel metal
sculpture. The origami figure can be folded from any type of paper, then a mold made
from it, either directly, or using the lost-wax (or rather, lost-paper) process. If you use the
latter process, you should be sure to use an all-cellulose paper, not a clay-coated paper,
as the latter will leave inorganic residue in the mold after it has been burned out.
As you can see, origami artists have been an inventive lot over time, and this discussion
has only begun to touch on the materials that can be folded. For commercial design
work, I've also folded shapes with Kapton, Mylar, and other polymer materials. For
another take on the assortment of materials that can be folded, see David Lister's essay
on folding materials on the BOS website.

http://www.langorigami.com/article/paper
http://www.mymodernmet.com/profiles/blogs/cristian-marianciuc-origami-journal

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