![kawasaki rose diagram kawasaki rose diagram](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/LPM8vYD3z3s/maxresdefault.jpg)
The hand saws are cleaned, polished, hand sharpened and ready for use. I promisse the new diagram :) here for further questions and thanks again for your words.Millers falls importer australia Easy! Come and see for yourself. To fold just the point you can make the DE fold on E area and a perpendicular one along the border where lies E on step 6 (same thing with F), then you have a cross, but trying to make it as small as possible. When I say "mark just the point E" (or F) I'm trying to avoid to fold that line for all the layers that are together, because on step 6 you are folding the complete model, a group of layers, and when you unfold everything on step 10 you will have two angles drawed, the one for the petal and a mirror one from point D, you can do so anyway, but I suggest just to "pinch" point E, meaning to fold just the area when point E is going to be, so you get just two mirrored points referent to D, one to the right (the desired one) and another in the left), then in step 11 you propper mark the line DE. But I'll try to explain a little more this steps you're mentioning. Hi chin many thanks for your interest on it! I know the diagram is not very clear, I'm working in a new version with pictures which I hope to upload in this week or the next one.
#Kawasaki rose diagram full
With this in mind, and studying a little, I could develop a diagram to get the full figure from a couple of reference lines, including the secondary petals from steps 9 to 11 on Chan's diagram.įor example, to generate folds from Chan's step 12, it is only necessary the axial line and a reference point, aligning the line over itself and marking the fold passing through the reference point, as I show in the next image: This is especially useful when you use thick papers o textured to fold the rose, because Chan's method to draw the grid lose accuracy over the edges. The perfect geometry of Kawasaki give us a large number of references to achieve every one of them from two simple diagonal lines at 22.5º. The point I want to remark is that anyone who has folded this a couple of times can realize that the pre-folding of the grid is unnecessary to get tits main folds (step 12 of Chan's diagram). To build this rose is almost being creating, step by step, the CP of the figure, to collapse it then in a couple of master moves. It is precisely the analysis of the New Rose what gave the folder a deep learning about the relationship between geometry and origami. Here there is a video about how the rose is collapsed from its pre-folded CP. Many other variations has been created over this three diagrams, to get a larger number of petals or diferents finishing details, but the heart of this figure, the twisting fold, remains unvariable as a testimony of the geniality of its author.Ĭhan's diagram remains being my favourite, mostly because its final result and also I guess because sentimental reasons (it was one of the first figures I've memorized and gifted) However, I have to admit that its 22.5º grid pre-folded takes out all ellegance to the next steps in the folding. Later, japanese Kunihiko Kasahara published in his book " Origami for the Connoisseur" a diagram a little less elaborated than Chan's and called it the "Original Kawasakai Rose". He unfolded the gift and developed a folding sequence and diagram, which was published and spread trough the net, becoming very popular and known as the " New Kawasaky Rose". Before, in 1994, during the New York Convention, Kawasaki teached the rose to the american creator Joseph Wu and he folded and gifted one to his friend Winson Chan.
![kawasaki rose diagram kawasaki rose diagram](http://help.rockware.com/rockworks17/WebHelp/rose_diagram_sm2.png)
On this book there is a complete chapter dedicated to this rose and its variations, being this the first version "from the author" of its diagram.