The most famous of origami roses is the Kawasaki rose, but the Kawasaki rose is relatively simple. For those who love folding roses, it requires some difficult challenges! Everyone has their own skills for folding roses. Let’s share a beautiful and beautiful rose. Let’s learn the complicated NS rose origami together!
Part One: Cutting Paper. Since it is a five-petal rose, we must use regular pentagonal paper.
The pentagonal paper is cut.
Fold the bottom tip of the triangle toward the midline, leaving a crease, which will look like this from the bottom side.
Use crease 2 to find crease 1 and leave the crease.
What it looks like after opening. Follow these steps for each layer and it will look like the picture below.
Restore crease 2, find a section near the top, and divide it into three equal sections, with the three α lengths being the same.
Find the best picture in the picture aboveThe part on the right side is folded parallel to the edge.
After leaving the crease, divide the five layers into three layers on one side and two layers on the side like the 18th floor. Then fold the three left layers together along the crease valley, restore the folded crease 2, turn it over, and Repeat the crease steps for one-third of the way on the other side.
The two third lines overlap, forming a very awkward shape.
The small diamond shape at the top is stacked several times, so it looks very thick. The windmilling begins, maintaining those five one-third creases, it’s time to test everyone’s skills.
Gently press down the standing part in the middle to flatten it.
Turn over.
Gently pull up one ridge and make a slight arc at the top.
Use this ridge to find the next one, working counterclockwise.
After finding the position, compact the lower crease, and the rendering of the five sides is completed.
Its starting to look like a rose. Use your little finger or the eraser end of a pencil to widen the center of the flower and make it smoother.
Wrap it up little by little.
The following steps are a bit difficult. They are the key steps to make double-layered petals! This is the left side of the rose.
From the left are crease 2, crease m, the line connecting the top of crease m and the bottom of crease 1, and crease 1. Then mark that connecting line as G, and break G.
Draw a vertical line from the top of G and make a mountain fold on the right side (inside side). Open up to form an irregular quadrilateral. Part of the ridge in the picture above is the diagonal of the quadrilateral.
Pinch the quadrilateral so that it attaches to the left side.
Turn it at an angle, draw a vertical line from the upward vertex in the picture and fold it into the valley.
After folding, flatten the standing area, as shown in the picture.
Same method for the remaining four sides.
Retract into cup shape.
Please look at the side where my little finger is in the picture above. Fold the side upwards so that the side coincides with the top side (I didn’t do it well here, I should go higher). Process diagram.
The remaining sides are folded in the same way, and the side effects are shown after folding.
Upside down, bottom side view.
Note that the bottom of this rose is hollow. Just fold off the small sharp corners one by one, and then fold it into the middle.
Turn it over so that the top is facing you, and a rosette will appear. The first step of shaping is to open the lower petals.
Open the top layer again.
The lower layer of petals has two layers. Make a small triangle on the side, and then fold it back according to the center line to make the petals more beautiful.
The difference between folding all sides and not folding them.
To put it more mellowly, it’s gorgeously finished~
At the bottom, note that this rose has no bottom.
The beautiful origami rose is completed, have you learned how to do it?~