Folding Sunday - NYC, USA: Museum of Natural History 
(Formerly Folding-Free-For-All) 


Any OrigamiUSA members in or visiting the New York City area on the 4th Sunday 
of each month are welcome to join our monthly folding meetings at the American 
Museum of Natural History from 1:00 to 4:00 PM. Origami Sunday will be held 
this Sunday (December 28, 2014) in Children's Lunchrooms in the basement of the 
Museum of Natural History. This is the room mostly reserved for the fourth 
Sunday meetings through the end of next year, subject to some changes. 


Please bring folding paper plus something to share. It's especially appreciated 
if you bring a model to teach, but if you're not comfortable teaching yet 
please bring something else to contribute such as a model to show that you've 
been enjoying folding, an origami book or newsletter others might find of 
interest, or paper for the group. We will have a special sharing table" set 
aside for display of models to teach, models to show, books, publications, and 
paper contributions. 


These monthly meetings are a continuation of the tradition Lillian Oppenheimer 
began over 50 years ago of encouraging paperfolders to get together to teach 
each other and exchange ideas. OrigamiUSA is able to provide a meeting space - 
the rest is up to those attending. When you arrive at the museum please check 
at any information desk for the meeting room number. 


In annual tradition, the delightfully decorated Origami Holiday Tree has marked 
the start of the holiday season at the Museum for more than 30 years.  The tree 
opens to the public on Monday November 24, 2014 in the Grand Gallery, near the 
77th Street exit on the Museum's first floor. While not open to the public, 
OrigamiUSA members are welcome to come to the lighting of the tree at 
approximately 10:30 am. http://www.amnh.org/calendar/origami-holiday-tree 


Remember the Origami by Children 
To submit an entry, you must be 18 or younger as of the submission deadline, 
March 31, in the year you are making your submission. Models must be classic 
origami, without drawing, embellishments, glue, tape, or cutting. For further 
information: http://origamiusa.org/obc

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