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Posted: March 24th, 2009, 3:48 pm
by jojotoar
I like your model!
Very unique...

you know bookcrossing

Posted: March 24th, 2009, 11:39 pm
by Pauli
travelling by underground and reading this distressing book I needed a bookmark, did it and decided to post my first origami-design proudly for you, you can see as a beginner I kept it flat and simple

Image

Posted: March 25th, 2009, 12:38 am
by Ondrej.Cibulka
Oh! Excellent! Excellent!

My favorite for this month is:
mikiller's figure with black hair in the motion - absolutely magnificent piece of origami art!

I am very bussy so until today I made photo of my models, I have three (as I noticed before).

road
Image

Fujisan - I tried to hit the aestethic transcendence of Fuji
Image

black and white world vision
Image

Posted: March 25th, 2009, 3:27 am
by ftangdude55
Hurrah for minimalism!!! :lol:

Posted: March 25th, 2009, 4:15 am
by qtrollip
Gemsbok (Oryx)
From an uncut square.
Image
Quentin

Posted: March 25th, 2009, 5:13 am
by snowblue
Gemsbok (Oryx)

clear & pretty

Posted: March 25th, 2009, 12:59 pm
by InsomniacFolder
Ondrej, I like Fuji-San, it has the essence of a mountain.

The oryx is very nice too, the proportions of the antlers looks about perfect.

I often feel many antelope models, of all varieties, make the antlers too short.

Strangely thouhg, deer models seem to get the proportions more correct.

Anyway, a nice model, thouhg I prefer the spingbok, as a creature, and your model.

Posted: March 25th, 2009, 2:31 pm
by tanvuong85
oh. The Gemsbok (Oryx) so beautyful :shock: :shock:

Posted: March 25th, 2009, 3:31 pm
by Ondrej.Cibulka
InsomniacFolder wrote:Ondrej, I like Fuji-San, it has the essence of a mountain.
Thank you very much. I hope, it brings a piece of meditative calmness to everyone in this fast and hectic time period. It is "open-fold" as labelled this style Kasahara Kunihiko.

Posted: March 25th, 2009, 9:08 pm
by Wizmatt
Wow! Lovely Oryx Quentin, I really like your fujisan Ondrej, and I have to agree with you that mikiller's figure is beautiful.

Quentin, is there an open chest/throat area on the oryx where you could pull out a raw edge to give it the black line down to it's legs?

Posted: March 25th, 2009, 9:41 pm
by qtrollip
Wizmatt, great question.
When I started of on designing the Oryx, I said to myself that I won't be happy unless the model has the black stripe running along its belly. That is possible here, but then the tail would be white insted of black, and also the shape of the hinquarters would be ugly.
So I was more happy with this result. I think the shape and horns are distinguishable enough as an Oryx and it doesnt need the black stripes to be recognisable.
About the neck, no, no raw edge there.
Seeing that 8 flaps need colour-changes, 8 points need to come from the edge of the square. That means I would need a base with 10 points from the edge to get the stripe along the belly. That would add unwanted lines, and also unused points from the center of the square.
Otherwise I could turn it "inside out", but then the legs and horns would come out the bottom of the model, losing the lines for the shoulders. That would also shorten the horns.
I guess it is possible, but I would have to totally redesign it then and possibly use box-pleating, something I am not fond of in animal models.

Thank you for your interest.
Greetings
Quentin

Posted: March 25th, 2009, 10:19 pm
by HankSimon
Magnificent Oryx and the shaping is fantastic, especially the proportions around the head and horns....Could you post a few more pictures from different angles ?

- Hank Simon

Posted: March 26th, 2009, 1:38 am
by Razzmatazz
The best sofar I'd think is snowblues's model (chang chang chang). It's creative.
Oh Snowblue, do you have a diagram or CP for that model, or are you keeping it to your self? It looks pretty fun!

Posted: March 26th, 2009, 2:18 am
by snowblue
Razzmatazz

I'll show my chang chang chang

diagram in my flickr

It's very easy to fold :)

Posted: March 26th, 2009, 8:47 am
by Wizmatt
qtrollip wrote:Wizmatt, great question.
Thanks for your response, it's really interesting to hear how different people design models and overcome problems.