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Fractal Modular Origami Anonymous
I made an agreement with a math teacher at my college to make him some fractal modular origami like the picture here. I can probably make the square, but any module instructions or other instructions would be appreciated. Thank you.
>> pez
http://hektor.umcs.lublin.pl/~mikosmul/index.html
This one's pretty good, but it's a little confusing trying to find instructions for some of them.
>> Anonymous
Try the menger sponge with business card units. (Its the same structure as you have there, but each cube is made of 6 units of two folds each) Its a really quick fold, but it requires a lot of units. It would probably be good to ask to what iteration this teacher wants these fractals. Cause either your units are gonna need to get real small, or your project is gonna get real big.

Really Fast.
>> Anonymous
http://world.std.com/~j9/sponge/
I used 4ths of index cards instead of business cards.
>> Tarage !DqN1ECWgHk
>>44728

Doesn't matter how many iterations. Just something he could show as a physical representation.

>>44704

Thats where I got this picture from.

>>44729

No instructions sadly.

----

Anything else?
>> Tarage !DqN1ECWgHk
Sorry, I'm OP btw.
>> Anonymous
>>44790
Find instructions in the 3rd link on the page:
"business card cubes". They are verbal, but, like I said, its a quick fold. I guess I should have expounded on that saying that it's really simple.

I just reads hard.
>> Tarage !DqN1ECWgHk
Bumping once just to see if anyone else can provide anything different than what is here.
>> Tumbo
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I'm about to start a depth 3 in a few hours and i'm going to do them with index cards (3x5) except i am going to divide a index card into 16 pieces see picture.
>> Anonymous
>>45318
please do. i started a depth 3 6 years ago. i never finished. i still have all the note cards needed and its mostly done. but i never finished. maybe i will post a picture when im not inebriated.
>> Tarage !DqN1ECWgHk
>>44806

You're going to have to point me directly to the page, because I'm not finding it.

Let me say that http://www.cs.utk.edu/~plank/plank/pics/origami/penultimate/square.html is a retarded module. Not only does it require such horid paper dimentions, but it requires folding in thirds AND cutting. In the time it would take me to fabricate the prices, it would be far too late to savlage any extra credit out of it.

Does anyone else have any other modules that would work? I've got a stack of 3 by 4 paper which is probably going to go to waste, but I'd like a module that is 'sane' to fold. No cuts, no rediculous folds like thirds, ect.

Sorry about bumping this again, but my math professor could really use some of these...
>> Tumbo !.CzKQna1OU
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http://world.std.com/~j9/sponge/cubes.html

<-- My attempt at showing.