Michael G. LaFosse

Story-gami Kit Ebook


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      ORIGAMI SYMBOLS KEY

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      CONTENTS

       Introduction

       Penguin

       Sailboat

       Tulip Plant with Blossom

       Table-top Racing Duck

       Heart

       Fortune Cookie Box

       Owl Bookmark

       Bookmark/Stacked Over Logan

       Freddie the Jumping AstroFrog

       Art Deco Wing

       Randlett’s Flapping Bird

       Balloon

       Bunny Rabbit

       Fox Mask

       Yoshizawa’s Swallowtail Butterfly

       Scary Skull

       Fiesta Box

       Kanji the Dog

      How to Download the Bonus Material of this Book.

      1. You must have an internet connection.

      2. Click the link below or copy paste the URL to your web browser.

       http://www.tuttlepublishing.com/story-gami-downloadable-cd-content

      For support email us at [email protected].

      INTRODUCTION

      The Origamido Studio was a great place to visit to learn anything about origami. To fulfill this broad mission, Origamido founders, Michael G. La-Fosse and Richard L. Alexander, found themselves in many roles at different times. Sometimes they were artists, designers, papermakers, authors, and gallery operators. More often than not, they were also educators, lecturers, and performers.

      For more than a dozen years, Origamido was a favorite stop in the Win-gate Street Arts District in Haverhill, Massachusetts. Perhaps the fondest memories of a youngster’s visit to Origamido Studio involve folding a simple origami model, learned through one of the founder’s often amusing, but mentally vivid, short stories or poems. This technique, called “Story-gami,” was made popular in the USA professionally, by Lillian Oppenheimer and Shari Lewis, during the 1960s. Lafosse and Alexander developed all of the basic stories presented, though their friends and students may have helped refine details during countless, laughter-filled, Thursday Night Beginners’ Walk-In Origami sessions held at the Origamido Studio.

      Typically, people interested in learning origami often purchase books or paper kits with diagrams. This solves the problem of memorizing a long folding sequence, but when the drawings are too difficult for the average person to understand, the student becomes frustrated. Showing the Story-gami on the video in this kit makes it is easier to see what is going on. The student can learn at their own pace, stopping and repeating a video sequence as many times as necessary, without trying the patience of the instructor. The camera can zoom in and show detail more easily than one can often see in person. Origami video customers have found that, after watching our video performances, they were then able to better understand the steps shown in their previously purchased origami books and kits.

      We hope you find that these stories and performances inspire a fresh and engaging approach to classroom activities, while hopefully affording the students a creative, fun activity. This selection of models is great for those with little, or no previous folding experience, but it is also for adults who enjoy sharing the joys of origami with beginners. We hope Story-gami will become a favorite addition to the classroom, and also a popular pastime for people of all ages when they gather with family and friends.

      PENGUIN

      A Story-gami by Michael G. LaFosse, Origamido, Inc.

       Traditional Design

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      Use a square piece of origami paper that is white on one side.

      This story takes place on a big, beautiful iceberg,2 floating off the edge of Antarctica, the continent at our south pole, covered with ice. This magnificent iceberg was given the name “The Big White Diamond”3 because it glistened like a dazzling gem in the bright, Antarctic sunshine.

      Three happy penguins lived on the edge of The Big White Diamond. Let me introduce them to you. The first penguin was named Viola. (One of my aunts was also called Viola—a beautiful name indeed.) Let’s fold each of the lower edges of The Big White Diamond inward to form the letter V, for Viola. On each side, fold over more of the paper near the top, and almost nothing at the bottom. See if you can balance the amount of black that shows on each side. Try to make the narrow points of each black triangle meet at a point at the base of The Big White Diamond. Now we have a V for Viola!4

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