orizuru (?? ori - "folded," tsuru "crane"), or paper tow , is the most classic design of all Japanese origami. It is a representation of the Japanese red-crown crane known as "Lord Crane Terhormat" in Japanese culture. Japanese culture believes that its wings bring souls to heaven. These are often used as wrapping ceremonies or restaurant table decorations. A thousand orizuru strung together is called senbazuru (???), which means "a thousand cranes". Sadako and A Thousand Paper Cuttings are classic Japanese works that speak of the importance of a thousand paper cranes. It is said that a thousand cranes must be made to desire to become reality.
Video Orizuru
Renzuru
The term renzuru ( ?? , "embedded sequence" ) refers to origami techniques where one fold multiple cranes from a single sheet of paper (usually square), uses a number of strategic cuts to form a semi-detached small square mosaic of the original large square paper. The resulting crane is attached to each other (for example, at the tip of the beak, wings, or tail) or at the end of the body (for example, a baby crane sitting on the back of his mother). The trick is to fold all the cranes without damaging the small paper bridges that attach them to each other or, in some cases, to effectively hide extra paper.
The typical renzuru configuration includes four or more loop cranes mounted on the wingtips. One of the simplest forms, made of a half-square (2x1 rectangle) cuts half of one of the long sides, producing two cranes that share the entire wing, positioned vertically between their bodies; head and tail can be facing the same or opposite direction. This is known as imoseyama . If it is made of paper colored differently on each side, the crane will have a different color.
This origami technique was first illustrated in one of the earliest known origami books, Hiden Senbazuru Orikata ââem> (1797). (The updated diagram of this early work can be found in the current book by the author of origami Japanese Kunihiko Kasahara.) Maps Orizuru
Fold orizuru
References
External links
Media related to Origami Crane on Wikimedia Commons
- The video shows how to create an orizuru
Source of the article : Wikipedia