The Origami Crane Lynda Laningham Rend Lake College.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Make an Origami Jumping Frog
Advertisements

How To Make An Origami Frog
Coordinate Plane Practice The following presentation provides practice in two skillsThe following presentation provides practice in two skills –Graphing.
0 - 0.
Addition Facts
Literacy Instructions Thursday 7 th January 2010 Making a pop up card.
Teacher instructions: 1.Print the lesson, 2.Display slides 2, 3 and 4 with Procedure step 3 in the lesson. 3.Display slides 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 with Procedure.
Addition 1’s to 20.
25 seconds left…...
Test B, 100 Subtraction Facts
Week 1.
Start with a sheet of A4 paper size FOLD the paper on all lines then open up. 2 2.
Start with a square piece of paper, the coloured side up. Fold in half one way, then open.
Origami Crane The classic figure of the crane is a Japanese symbol of long life.
Geometry Origami - Penguin What shape do we begin with?
WATCH THIS
You need a square piece of paper. Fold the paper in half then unfold. Fold the paper along the diagonal then unfold.Repeat with the second diagonal.
Origami Bookmark Your paper should look like a square.
佐々木 禎子 Sadako Sasaki and the thousand paper cranes.
Welcome to the Fabulous World of ORIGAMI Japanese print from the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Cranes for Peace The Sadako Sasaki story.. In the beginning… HIROSHIMA - A once a peaceful city on the coast of the Seto Inland Sea….
Japanese Crane English 1- Louise S. McGehee School 2004 If you do not have your volume turned on… please do so. (Cranes: Their Biology)
Origami and Kirigami.
How to Make an Origami Jumping Frog. Step 1 Start with a sheet of paper. You can use ordinary computer paper, colored paper, or origami paper.
Origami Flower Instructions. 1. Arrange the origami paper on a flat surface, color side down, with one corner pointing at you.
Origami Cranes for Peace 1000 Cranes of Peace for Syria Project KNOW YOUR COMMUNITY – KNOW YOUR WORLDKNOW YOUR COMMUNITY – KNOW YOUR WORLD.
Japanese Origami By: Yeon, Sadie, and Kelsey. Contents  Origami History  Crane Origami  Frog Origami  Butterfly Origami  Tutorials.
Module 7 Lesson 8 Create a tangram puzzle and observe relationships among shapes.
How to build a paper airplane By Chaney Rigsby. Material to use  Paper is the one of the worst materials to use to make a paper airplane  The best material.
By: Dawit Teklu, Jaret Peters, Chris Phillips.   Origami is the Japanese traditional art of paper folding  Ori means fold and gami means paper  折鶴.
Kawasaki and Origami Megan Morgan Inquiry IV Presentation April 27, 2010.
Following directions. Design your paper on ONE side.
Sadako & the Thousand Paper Cranes
Hiroshima ひろしま And the story of Sadako.
ORIGAMI The Art of Paper Folding Mayonila, Princess J. Rasonable, Fatima T.
おりがみ ジューデ イ と エリカ. History Origami is paper folding. (Ori=folding, Kami=paper) It is known to be Japanese but it is possible that it existed in China,
First you start off with a square piece of paper and lay it out on the blank side.
Print a copy of the Bookmark Template.. Select one of the templates and cut it out along the dotted lines. Cut all the way through to the edge on the.
+ Paper Toys From around The World By Sarah Woon and Paris Braim.
How to Create an Origami Flapping Bird By Sally Murphy Origami flapping bird.jpg © Sally Murphy. Used with permission.
By Taylor and Kathy Introduction o Origami is where a single square peace of paper is used to make animals such as a Butterfly or a bird. o The best.
Making the Tangram.
How to Make an Origami Jumping Frog. This amazing origami frog really jumps! When you're done making this amazing frog, you can have a frog jumping contest.
How many paper cranes did Sadako fold before she died? 644.
Mr. Howard’s Art Survey Class Origami Project. Sadako Sasaki was a Japanese girl living in Hiroshima when the atomic bomb was dropped on Japan (August.
1.Fold color side inward and make crossed creases. Then, put your origami like this. White side is facing up. ⇒
Use of Modeling. Origami House Start off with an origami paper color side down.
How many of you know how to make an origami crane?
Origami is the Japanese word for Paper Folding ORIGAMI ORI GAMI To FoldPaper (kami – Japanese for paper) The art of paper making dates back to China in.
Folding Fold a paper crane Prepare a square paper.
JAPAN LAND OF THE RISING SUN. FACTS  Continent of Asia  Capital of Japan is Tokyo  Population of Japan is 127,463,611 (July 2006 est.)  Japan Climate.
Welcome to the Fabulous World of ORIGAMI Japanese print from the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
HOW TO MAKE AN Spring 2012 Origami Balloon By: SondraVojvodich.
Origami 折り紙.
HOW TO MAKE A PAPER CRANE. Step 1: Hip To Be Square  For this project you will need 1 square piece of paper (preferably origami paper)*, and nimble fingers.
Alter-not-a-one Alternaria alternata origami spore Created by Jun Tsuji.
Geometry Origami - Angelfish
How To Make a Paper Boat.
Classroom Educational Component
Basic Foldable Shapes.
Geometry Origami Puppet
Example Standard Work Sheets Paper Drinking Cup
Done by: Sally Zaatiti.
Origami Let’s make a Fish!.
Principles of Art Notes Page.
A Thousand Origami Cranes
DNA 3D Paper Model Directions.
Geometry Origami - Nightingale
Origami (crane).
James Webb Space Telescope
Presentation transcript:

The Origami Crane Lynda Laningham Rend Lake College

OrigamiOrigami is the ancient Japanese art of paper folding. The purpose of this lesson is to learn to fold the popular Origami crane. First, we will explore its historical, cultural, and social significance.

There is a legend in Japan which says that anyone who folds one thousand Origami cranes will be granted a wish by a crane, one of the mystical beasts of Japan.one thousand Origami cranes

In Hiroshima, Japan, a young old girl named Sadako Sasaki became ill with Leukemia after exposure to radiation caused by the atomic bomb at the end of World War II. She knew of the legend and hoped the gods would grant her wish to get well. She folded over 1000 paper cranes before she died on October 25, 1955, at the age of twelve. Sadako Sasaki

Sadako was an inspiration to those who knew her. Her friends and classmates published a book of her letters which inspired many more people. Children all over Japan collected money to build a monument to Sadako. In 1958, a statue of Sadako holding a golden crane was unveiled in HiroshimaHiroshima Peace ParkPeace Park.

There is also a statue of Sadako in Seattle Peace Park, in the state of Washington. Sadako and the thousand Origami cranes has become a symbol of world peace and the impact of nuclear war.Seattle Peace Park

Origami is thought to have started over a thousand years ago. Since paper was expensive in those days, it could only be used for ceremonies, not for fun and enjoyment. Eventually, origami became a part of everyday Japanese life and has now become a world wide recreational pastime.

Traditional Origami paper is a 150 mm x 150 mm (5.875 in x in) square which is colored on one side and white on the other. You can cut your own Origami paper out of colored copy paper. If you cut it 5 ½ in x 5 ½ in, you can get two pieces out of an 8 ½ in x 11 in sheet of paper.

Let's begin!

Step 1: Fold paper in half with white side inside. Crease sharply and unfold. Step 2: Fold in half the other direction. Crease and unfold.

Step 3: Fold in half along the diagonal into a triangle. Crease and unfold. Step 4: Turn paper over. Fold in half along the other diagonal with white side out. Crease and unfold.

Step 5: Turn piece colored side out and crease on fold lines as shown. This construct is called the Square Base. Step 6: Fold in top layer of right-hand corner aligning lower right edge with center line. Crease.

Step 7: Repeat step 6 on left-hand side.Step 8: Fold and crease top corner down as shown.

Step 9: Unfold steps 6, 7, and 8 as shown. Step 10: Pull bottom corner up as shown, creasing fold lines down in the reverse direction.

Step 11: Turn piece over and repeat steps 6 through 10. This construct is called the Bird Base.

Step 12: Fold in right-hand corner aligning lower right edge with center line. Crease. Step 13: Repeat step 12 on left-hand side.

Step 14: Turn piece over and repeat steps 12 and 13. Piece should now look like it has two “legs”. Step 15: Fold one “leg” up as shown and unfold.

Step 16: Using the fold line from step 15 as a guide, fold the “leg” inside out and up. Step 17: Repeat steps 15 and 16 on the other side.

Step 18: Fold the tip of one side inside out and down as shown to form the head. Step 19: Gently pull the wings out and downward to shape as desired. If you wish, you can blow air into the hole on the bottom.

Congratulations, you have just finished folding your first Origami crane. You only have 999 more to go.