I should have thought to look at the photo. Thanks for the heads up. Tom
Sullivan
> On 05/19/2022 10:11 AM Matthew Green wrote:
>
>
> Hi Tom,
> Looking closely at the photograph of the elephant at the beginning of the
> book and at a couple of the following steps in the
Hi Tom,
Looking closely at the photograph of the elephant at the beginning of the book
and at a couple of the following steps in the diagram, it looks like the three
intersecting creases on each side of the double rabbit ear should actually be
valley folds and only the separate vertical crease
Thanks, The model doesn't lie flat so that could be the answer. I still have
trouble picturing it without a valley fold somewhere. I'll have to see when I
get there. Tom Sullivan
> On 05/18/2022 9:46 AM Anna wrote:
>
>
> Well, it might be possible if the model doesn't fold flat
Well, it might be possible if the model doesn't fold flat but stays in a
three dimensional box shape. In this case the crease that doesn't belong to
the double rabbit ear would most likely not be folded strong but as a
curve, to form the backside of the elephant.
Am Mi., 18. Mai 2022 um 14:52 Uhr
I am fold Quentin Trollip's elephant from Origami Sequence. In looking ahead
to the tail section I noticed what appears to be an illustration error. In
diagram 72, double rabbit earing the tail, it shows all mountain folds. That
doesn't seem possible. Am I missing something? Tom Sulllivan