Pegasus, also known as Pegasus, is one of the most famous fantasy creatures in Greek mythology. It is a horse with wings that can fly. Pegasus was born from the blood of the succubus Medusa and is the mount of the God of Poetry (Muse). Detailed illustrated tutorial on handmade origami Pegasus, excluding the plastic part, if you are interested, give it a try~
Tie the line first.
Collapse.
Fold toward the center line, leaving a crease.
Press the crease to open.
Repeat the previous steps.
Fold the four corners toward the center.
Scroll down as shown.
Leave another crease.
Repeat the steps on the other side.
Fully expanded.
Find the points in the graph.
Align the top corner to that point, leaving a crease.
Fold the top corner toward the crease you just made.
Fold the existing creases downward.
Find 3 points in the picture and leave creases.
Fold inward according to the solid line in the above figure as the peak and the dotted line as the valley.
Find these 3 creases, the solid lines are peaks, and the dotted lines are valleys turned upward.
Repeat steps 17-20 on the other side.
Fold the crease into the shape as shown.
Fold upward as shown.
Repeat the previous steps 3 times.
Flat.
Fold inward according to the crease.
This should also be folded inwards.
The same goes for the back.
Leave creases as shown.
Two folds overlap, leaving another crease.
After restoring, press the crease and turn it to the right.
Press flat, leaving creases.
Use 3 creases to make a valley fold.
Repeat steps 30-34 on the other side.
Pull out the small triangle inside.
Expand.
Turn down and flatten.
Fold according to the corner bisector in the picture, and the paper will naturally turn upward.
After rotating the paper 90 degrees, turn it upward and flatten it.
Use the gesture to gently pull out the paper.
Look carefully at the creases in the picture.
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Find the rhombus and make a valley fold according to its diagonal.
Continue to open the paper layer here.
Flat.
Leave creases as shown in the picture.
The solid line is the mountain line, the dotted line is the valley line, fold upward and flatten.
Leave a crease along the corner bisector.
Open.
Make a mountain fold according to the crease.
Repeat steps 42-53 on the other side.
Connect two points, leaving a crease.
Open both sides according to the picture, and the paper will naturally turn upward according to the picture.
The small triangle here needs to be folded out.
Leave creases as shown in the picture.
Leave a crease when turning it back.
Scroll up.
Fold in half.
Fold inwards.
Leave creases as shown.
Open the bottom and make creases with the solid line as the mountain line and the dotted line as the valley line.
Pull this out slightly.
Fold inwards.
Fold the left side in half, leaving the points shown in the picture.
Fold upwards.
Open.
Adjust to intersect with this point.
Repeat steps 68-73 on the other side and turn backwards as shown when finished.
Leave a crease along the corner bisector.
Continue to crease along the corner bisector on the other side.
After restoration, fold inward according to the red line in the picture.
Continue to fold inward, and after completion, follow the steps here75 leaves overlapping creases.
Continue to fold inward along the crease.
Push this up.
Press the crease along the left corner bisector and repeat the same steps on the other side.
Fold the Pegasus ears inward.
Hide the excess paper in the middle and adjust the shape of the horses head.
Flip the Pegasus' wings upward.
Cut out the horses tail according to the mountain line and valley line in the picture.
Scroll up.
Fold inwards.
Fold inwards.
Turn the legs down and then fold them inward.
Fold inward again here.
Scroll back.
Fold the legs inward again and repeat steps 91-93 on the other side.
Fold inwards.
Tani fold.
Repeat the same steps here, and do the same on the back.
Turn toward this line.
Fold upward again.
After restoring, make a few more segment folds and fold them according to the dotted line in the picture. Finally, the shaping is done to complete the origami of Pegasus~