In the encyclopedia of making origami roses, the more classic and common ones are various types of four-petal origami roses. The more classic one is the Kawasaki rose that everyone is very familiar with. Its biggest feature is the use of quadrilateral shapes. The paper is folded, and the final effect is a four-petal rose. One flaw of the four-petal origami rose is that it is quite different from a real rose. After all, the four petals of the four-petal origami rose cannot well simulate the real rose pattern in nature, so the other four petals are used. Tutorials for extended origami roses based on petal origami roses are beginning to appear. For example, here is the five-petal origami rose recommended to everyone.
The original artist of this five-petal origami rose is Leong Cheng Chit. However, since Leong Cheng Chit only provided the corresponding origami diagram in Flickr, it is not very convenient for everyone to make, so origami expert Penny F specially made it specific. The folding method was re-presented with the actual shooting pictures, resulting in the wonderful tutorial we see here (original text: blog.sina.com.cn/s/blog_668f18dd0100ho06.html). This wonderful origami tutorial should be of great help to students who like to make origami roses. At the same time, you don’t have to worry about using pentagonal paper to complete this five-petal origami rose, because at the beginning of the tutorial, Penny F first showed how to obtain pentagonal paper.
The first thing is to teach students who are not very familiar with processing quadrilateral paper into pentagonal paper how to do it. After all, this kind of paper processing will still be used in many origami in the future.
1. Take a square.
2. Fold in half along the diagonal line.
3. Fold the left and right corners in half and press lightly to get the center point of the square.
4. Gently press the upper corner towards the center point of the square to get the marked point as shown in the figure.
5. Fold the upper corner to the marked point one step forward.