Hello everyone,
I wondered if anyone could kindly take a minute to give me some
information on the following simple but lovely origami heart? I am
trying to find out if it is available for use commercially as i hope
to one day set up a card company and this is a design i would very
much
Wonderful idea for sharing diagram source files. Still learning my diagrams
are not up to par.
There seems to be so many different conventions in diagramming, it is hard
to know which symbols make more sense to
those reading them. For example - big sweeping arrows or smaller ones? For
me
Very nice work Tavin!!! Thank you for sharing.
On Wed, Feb 20, 2013 at 9:46 AM, kdiannesteph...@gmail.com wrote:
There seems to be so many different conventions in diagramming, it is hard
to know which symbols make more sense to
those reading them. For example - big sweeping arrows or smaller ones? For
me personally, the smaller ones make
From: kdiannesteph...@gmail.com kdiannesteph...@gmail.com
For example - big sweeping arrows or smaller ones? For me personally, the
smaller ones make
sense.
as to arrows, I don't have a preference with the length of the arrow shaft,
Thank you Anne!! Very helpful info.
On 20/02/13 02.18, Chris Lott wrote:
But I was thinking
that it would be a really useful learning experience to be able to
poke around with some existing diagram source files...just to see how
they are put together and potentially to avoid reinventing the wheel
with common elements. I'm using
On Wed, Feb 20, 2013 at 4:25 AM, David Brookes m...@dbrookes.co.uk wrote:
link to site where the heart was found:
http://www.origami-fun.com/origami-heart.html
On 21/2/2013 1:58 AM, Sy Chen responded:
If you put one more inner diamond shaped crease inside, it becomes
Edwin Young's famous