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Anonymous
/r/ing instructions for either this exact model, or something as close as possible. Must have Werewolf origami!
>> Anonymous
Bomp for my own justice
>> Cotton Eyed Joe­
>>119762
wait more than 9 minutes next time plox
>> Anonymous
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cut on dotted line, fold, and u has werewolf
>> Anonymous
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there...
>> Anonymous
bump
>> Anonymous
>>119794
dude why the hell are you bumping this.>>119788already posted the only known instructions for this! Fuckin hell... you know what, just go to this DA page:

http://guspath.deviantart.com/art/Werewolf-design-evolution-23268835
>> Anonymous
What is with these "crease patterns"? Is it even possible to recreate the original off of them? It seems almost like a joke...
>> Anonymous
>>119852
it's possible.. needs a lot of practice.
>> Anonymous
>>119852
Crease patterns show you all the fold lines to create an origami piece. Step by step pictures for origami is done because designers realize 98% of the people (once two students did an experiment on my school amongst exactly hundred randomly chosen other students, and only two managed to create the origami piece...) have no idea even on how to start with just the crease pattern.
>> Anonymous
Half the time I can't even make the thing from diagrams >.>
>> Anonymous
>>119862
100 is too small a sample size
>> Anonymous
>>119865
For a CNN poll on the American Presidential election, yes.
For a simple high school assignment, it is of epic proportions. Most students would ask their parents and a couple of their friends. These two came off their lazy asses and showed initiative and perseverence. They'll probably become your Presidents someday.
>> Anonymous
>>119865
lol you go try to get 100 high schoolers to devote some of their time and effort for something like this without offering them something in return, good luck!
>> Anonymous
>>119869
>>119868
im sure the one they did wasnt that hard or it wouldve probably ended up being 0. its not that hard to ask a bunch of people to do something. especially in a school where theres a ton there anyway. shoulda gone for more. like 500.
>> Anonymous
>>119876
Of course it isn't hard to ask people to do something. The hard part is actually getting them to do it. ;)
Dunno what anonymous "education factory" you go to btw, I'm not sure there are even 500 students at my school, but suppose you could find 1 in every hundred that are willing to help you out on some stupid school assignment (it's not like "please tell us your favourite color" but "take this paper with a bunch of lines and spend your entire afternoon trying to figure out how to make that into this" (shows finished picture) there would have to be 10.000 students. I AM sure there aren't THAT many students at my school.
>> Anonymous
>>119881
my highschool was public. there were around 2000 kids. my middle school however was a private school that went from K-12 and there were about 350 total from K-12. i think thered be more people willing to try for a few minutes. thats all you need.
>> Anonymous
>>119887
Then I think you are quite right. If you get 780 million people to try a crease pattern "for a few minutes" then yes, not a single one of them would be able to do it. They'd have turned over the paper a couple of times to see if there were some clues hidden on the back, or if they missed something on the front. Yeah, if you only ask them for a couple of minutes of their time, then they WILL start leaving after a couple of minutes cursing you for wasting their precious time on something that impossible. ;)
>> Anonymous
>>119890
Well, if you ask 780 million people I think chances are there would be one or two that will have seen a crease pattern before and they might be able to do it.
>> Anonymous
>>119890
then like i said earlier, im sure it wasnt anything hard with 239483984 creases in it. they shouldve designed the project to get as much data as they could, and in doing so use something thats not too hard that obviously no one will think is possible.
>> Anonymous
>>119893
All crease patterns seem impossible to me. Where do you even start or doesn't that really matter? And I can't see folding all those lines turning into anything really three dimensional... I tried one I just folded all the lines there were on the paper but it looked just like the inside of that corrugated cardboard, a sheet of paper with just a bunch of flutes going in different directions............
>> Anonymous
>>119898
Then congratulations, you made origami!
>> Anonymous
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Wow what a bunch of bitching....

anyhoot... here's a site on learning how to read CP.

http://spinflipper.com/origami/cp/tech3.html

Also, the creator cited using the idea's presented by Maekawa Jun's Devil. Info found here: http://www.origamiweb.com/models/devildiagrams_e.htm

Keep in mind that the CP's are the folds for the two separate models and therefore fold differently. If I get some time and mess with it a bit I'll try and make a quick PDF and post up some instructions.

after all that's a pretty easy CP. you could be attempting the one I've posted. And a link to other Origami CP's I would die to have:

http://chosetec.darkclan.net/origami/
>> Anonymous
>>120271
Most of the models on http://chosetec.darkclan.net/origami/ have CP's. Which one were you longing for that didn't?
>> Anonymous
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Epic crease pattern
>> Anonymous
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>>120300

Mostly the Rei and Vash ones.
>> Anonymous
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>>120350
Vash's crease pattern is on the site:
http://chosetec.darkclan.net/origami/vash/vash_CP.jpg

No Rei in sight though.
>> Anonymous
>>120354
Sorry, the one I uploaded is Wolfwood, and the one in the link is Vash.
>> Anonymous
>>120355

thanks anon!