(Forwarding reply for AOL user dermothaye...@aol.com, please reply to the
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On Fri, 5 Jun 2015 1:29 Matthias i...@faltlabor.de wrote:
Funny thing for me is, that your replies are more an answer to the also
very interesting question: „Which kind of instructions is
Funny thing for me is, that your replies are more an answer to the also very
interesting question:
„Which kind of instructions is the best way to teach origami models nowadays?“
And if you have an opinion on that: „Why do you think so?“
Cheers,
Matthias
P.S. I’m still a follower of the
On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 5:08 AM, Anne LaVin anne.la...@gmail.com wrote:
Forwarding a reply from AOL user dermothaye...@aol.com (Please reply to
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list or to him, not me!):
(snip)
I do wonder sometimes why in times of readily available photography,
difficult to diagram steps aren't
On 31may15, Dermot wrote: I do wonder sometimes why in times of readily
available photography, difficult to diagram steps aren't complemented with
an edited photograph or two.
- I agree! I love multi-media and this is an excellent use for it. And
if it results in more models getting
Forwarding a reply from AOL user dermothaye...@aol.com (Please reply to the
list or to him, not me!):
On Sun, May 31, 2015 at 5:40 PM, Matthias i...@faltlabor.de wrote:
I was just digging through the internet to find out how diagramming
looked like, before the Yoshizawa-Randlett system and I
Thus spake Matthias i...@faltlabor.de on 5/31/15 2:40 PM:
I was just digging through the internet to find out how diagramming
looked like, before the Yoshizawa-Randlett system and I found this very
interesting article from David Lister on the topic. Does any one of you
know more about it, or has
Hi Everyone,
I was just digging through the internet to find out how diagramming looked
like, before the Yoshizawa-Randlett system and I found this very interesting
article from David Lister on the topic. Does any one of you know more about it,
or has additional material?
Cheers and thanks in