When I was a kid, halfway through class, I would always pick up unwanted papers and fold them, conjuring up some small animals to get through the difficult class time. Some people continued this small hobby for several years and became an origami artist when they grew up!
Ross Symons, an origami artist from South Africa, originally worked as a website engineer with a stable job from 9 to 5. As time went by, he felt that his original job could not bring him creative satisfaction. In 2014, he started working as a website engineer. Instagram carried out the "A 365 day origami Instagram project" plan, and in less than two years it was followed by 100,000 people! After that, he quit his original job and became a full-time origami art creator.
Ross loves the traditional Japanese origami art very much. After completing a 365-day origami project, in order to improve his photography skills, he started another 365-day "Miniature Gami" origami project last year, using gadgets in daily life. , cleverly integrating his pocket origami into the scenes in the design to create more healing and interesting works.
Use small wooden clips to form a circle and put a few mini pink pigs in it. That’s oneLittle pig pen~
The thin leaf seedlings are arranged together like a bamboo forest. The red panda sitting in front is not sure if it is in a daze~
The koala climbed not a eucalyptus tree, but a lollipop.
Combined with some small items, Mario’s classic picture is perfectly presented!
Yoda can also be folded out! Things around him seem to be floating with telekinesis.
Inspired by objects in life, the clip with the serrated jaw is meant to have a crocodile next to it~
The dinosaur looks inexplicably cute when placed among a pile of asparagus~