Designs

These are models designed by me. They all use one uncut square, unless otherwise said. Come back to see new models added!

Young Girl

7/15/18 Folded from a 48cm square of sketch paper, partially on a 64x64 grid and partially on a 32x32 grid. This took about a week to design.

Baby Dragon

5/6/18 Folded from a sticky note and designed with a shifted bird base.

Cherry Blossom

4/5/18 Folded from a 55cm square of kami on a 48x48 grid. This took several days to design.

Squirrel

4/1/18 Folded from 35cm kami. This is a modified version of the rat from last year.

Conversation

3/10/18 Folded from 25cm square of kami

Aztec Warrior

2/10/18 Folded from a 48cm square of sketch paper. This took about a week to design.

Simple flower

3/2/18 Folded from 6in double sided kami. I doodled this while bored in class.

Mushroom

1/7/18 Folded and designed with the assistance of the software Ori-Revo

Ghost

10/27/17 Folded from 25cm tracing paper for Halloween.

Indiana Jones

10/4/17 Folded from 48cm sketch paper

Penguin

9/3/17 Folded from 25cm kami on a 32x32 grid. This model was sold to a friend for $40.

Teenage Boy

8/25/17 Folded from 25cm kami on a 32x32 grid. This model was intended to represent myself.

Stone Golem

8/20/17 Folded from 48cm sketch paper on a 56x56 grid. This model was extremely difficult to design, fold, and photograph.

Don

8/13/17 Folded from a 48cmx36cm rectangle of sketch paper. I designed and folded this the day before my first year of high school, whose mascot is the Don. This model is one of my few designs few designs that are not from a square.

Helicopter

7/26/17 Folded from 25cm tracing paper. I designed and folded this during a 30 minute train ride, and sold it for $2.50 to the classmate who gave me the challenge.

Pikmin

6/16/17 Folded from a sheet of 25cm kami each, on a 32x32 grid. Each one has the same body with modified heads.

Groot

5/4/17 Folded from 23cm construction paper on a 32x32 grid. This model was a gift for my friend's birthday. The 32 pleats were so thick the paper ripped. I didn't have MC yet so I tried to wet fold it, but it didn't dry in time. I ended up giving him my draft version.

Rat

Early 2017 Folded from a square of printer paper. Originally intended to "feed" another model, but it turned into it's own design, loosely based off a design from 5th grade.

Quetzal

4/30/17 Folded from 25cm kami. This model has two long tails that are hidden in this photo (but are visible with the crease pattern).

Baseball Hat

4/10/17 Folded from a square of printer paper

Kraken Attack

11/19/16 Folded from 55cm kami, partially on a 28x28 grid, and partially on a 56x56 grid. This model was inspired by Brian Chan's version, but is structurally completely different.

Elf

November 2016 Folded from a sheet of printer paper. I designed this after playing too much Smash Bros....

Snacktime

8/24/16 Folded from 25cm kami on a 32 grid, for a tryhard english project (2000 Leagues Under the Sea)

Warrior


Suppertime

April 2016, folded from 55cm kami on a 48x48 grid. I designed this after dissecting a squid in my science class.

Phoenix

November 2015, Folded from printer paper. This model "evolved" for a long time, as I tried messing around with the wings and tail. I even tried a hex pleated version.

Goblet

10/29/15 Folded from 25cm kami and some blue sticky notes. My friends and I were assigned to do a Day of the Dead altar for a fictional character in our Spanish class, so I folded a Goblet of Fire for Dumbledore. (I also added a "chocolate frog," which was a Tree Frog by Robert Lang on a brown paper.)

Ship

Spring 2015 Folded from 25cm kami, and designed from a frog base. I entered this in the county fair and got some money.

Sea Turtle

Unknown date; Folded from 6in kami. I designed this a long time ago when I was messing around with level shifters.

"Porkuskrat"

2013 Folded from printer paper. This is probably my oldest design, folded all the way back in 5th grade. I'm pretty sure I was trying to design a skinny Easter-style dragon so I used a 32x32 grid. I really underestimated how much paper the pleats would take up, and the proportions ended up more like a small animal. The question was: what animal? I showed it to my friend (the one who taught me how to fold a fortune teller back in first grade), and he said it was a porcupine, a skunk, and a rat; thus, "porkuskrat."