>>Papirfoldning.dk <[email protected]> ha scritto:
>>When I fold side to side I make a book fold and I have created a ... what?
>>When instructing I can tell them to fold sides to sides, or to make the ...
>>what?
I always say 'fold sides to sides' and I call the creases 'middle lines'.
Francesco
"There's a fold in everything..." www.flickr.com/photos/mancinerie
Il lunedì 8 luglio 2019 12:27:57 CEST, Papirfoldning.dk
<[email protected]> ha scritto:
When I fold corner to corner I make a diagonal fold and I have created a
diagonal crease. When instructing I can tell them to fold corners to corners,
or to make the diagonals.
When I fold side to side I make a book fold and I have created a ... what? When
instructing I can tell them to fold sides to sides, or to make the ... what?
Certainly not the books :-)
When making each of these steps, I get the diagonal cross and the ... what ...
cross?
In Danish I call them “diagonalfolder” and “tværfolder”, where “tværs” means
across, and I get a “diagonalkryds” and a “tværkryds” where “kryds” means cross.
That is, I do not know, in English, the name of the crease that goes from the
centre of one edge to the centre of the opposite edge. And I do not know the
name of the cross made from two of those creases.
I hope somebody can clear up this terminology for me.
Best regards,
Hans
Hans Dybkjær
papirfoldning.dk
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