Material preparation: paper.
1, first take out the prepared square colored paper, fold it in half along the diagonal, open it, and then fold it in half along the other diagonal.
2. Then fold in half horizontally, then fold in half, and then fold in half on both sides respectively.
3. Open, fold on the other side in the same way, and then open.
4. Each corner is folded into a triangle at the position of four small squares, and all four corners are folded equally.
5. Then fold in half along the center line, and then fold in half along the lower edge of the hypotenuse.
6. Open it, and then fold it in half along the other center line as in the previous step.
7. Open it, then fold it into a diamond, and fold the lower corner upward into a small triangle.
8. Open it again, find the small square crease in the middle and fold it in half, as shown in the figure.
9. Then fold the redundant parts of the four sides clockwise, open them like a windmill, and use your fingers to recess a part along the previous crease, as shown in the figure.
10, fold the small square on the side in half, open a concave triangle, and then fold it up along the small square on the left. The four-sided folding method is the same.
1 1, then the four sides are folded to the middle, and the four corners are folded to the middle.
12, turn it over, the embryonic form will come out, and then arrange the petals by hand, so that a Kawasaki rose is completed.
Kawasaki rose origami art:
Kawasaki Rose is a rose work in origami art, named after its inventor, Mr. Kawasaki Toshiwa. Kawasaki roses are famous for their lifelike shapes. Kawasaki roses are also very similar to European and American roses, and they are also simplified versions of European and American roses.
Origami originated in China in 1 or 2nd century, and was introduced to Japan in 6th century, and then spread to the whole world through Japan. It is also said that origami originated in Japan and Spain. The combination of origami and natural science has not only become an auxiliary teaching tool in architectural schools, but also developed origami geometry as a branch of modern geometry.