iting and generalizable?I especially like the idea of
>> affixing such rigid surfaces to cloth via a printer and the results are
>> stunning.
>>
>> On Mon, Oct 7, 2019 at 3:49 PM Matthew Gardiner
>> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>> Kate Honeyman
t; > > printing Kate
> >
> > Toot... I wrote my PhD thesis and published a paper about a process
> called
> > Fold Printing. It?s pretty amazing.
> >
> > There?s a bunch of links on this page.
> >
> > https://matthewgardiner.net/#research
> >
&
s one of the reasons was
also established that some leading heart and phase wish for peace.
Sincerely,
jassu from Korea
보낸 사람: Laura R 대신 Origami
보낸 날짜: 2019년 10월 9일 수요일 오전 11:13
받는 사람: The Origami Mailing List
제목: [Origami] why November 11th is WOD
Hi Laura,
According to NOA's website, each number "1" is regarded as one side of
square, therefore Nov. 11th (11th day of 11th month) is the Origami Day in
Japan. Nov. 11th is also the World Peace Memorial Day (when the World War
I Treaty of 1918 was signed), which aligns with the peaceful pract
My understanding is that 11 November is Remembrance Day / Armistice Day, and so
the last day of WOD was chosen as a way to reflect that origami (and especially
origami cranes) are a symbol of peace.
>I know Oct. 24th is Lillian Oppenheimer’s birthday, which marks the beginning
>of a period >k
Sent from my iPad
> On Oct 8, 2019, at 9:13 PM, Laura R wrote:
>
> But does anyone know why November 11th was the day chosen in Japan to be the
> World Origami Day?
A quick google search found that According to artfixx.com:
“In Japan, November 11th was chosen as Origami Day by the Nippon O
I know Oct. 24th is Lillian Oppenheimer’s birthday, which marks the beginning
of a period known as World Origami Days, until 11/11.
But does anyone know why November 11th was the day chosen in Japan to be the
World Origami Day?
Laura Rozenberg