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origami_crane
fold, crease, flap, repeat, swing, sheet, square, hole underneath, air, wings, Spread, head, downward, arrow, pull. Fold it in half diagonally, then fold it in half again. sheet, pulling it to the right to form a square. the center line, crease the folds, and reopen. Note that right and left corners will swing to the center. Fold right and left corners to center, and crease. Turn the paper over and repeat this step. the paper over and, once again, fold the right flap to the left. Fold the two lower points up between the two flaps on each side. Fold one tip downward to form the head. Blow a little air into the hole underneath to fill out the body. Origami http://www.clevelandart.org/educef/asianodyssey/pdf/Origami.pdf cranes, origami, Japanese, art, birds, CMA, flowers, culture, stories, folktales, trees, tradition, art form, grade, observe. This lesson is intended for first grade. To understand and appreciate cultural diversity through a hands-on experience using a Japanese art form. Art and tradition interplay to express important Japanese values. They reflect Japanese celebrations, ideals, and culture. The crane is a bird that Japanese children often read about in their folktales and stories. Other subjects of origami include folktale animal characters such as cranes, foxes and carp (fish); flowers such as water lilies and tulips; dolls; and boats. 1. Read and discuss Read Yoko's Paper Cranes and Tree of Cranes, two modernday stories that show pictures of origami cranes and their importance to Japanese children. lesson11 http://www.sacsplash.org/mather/manual/highres/lesson11.pdf squares, glue, fold, Students, triangles, diagonally opposite, opens, attach, perimeter, thin, push, Crease, origami book, equal rectangles, tag board. Objective: Students create a unique book to share their knowledge of vernal pools. 2. Fold the paper in half - corners to corners to create two equal rectangles. The fold should have created two small squares diagonally opposite each other and two other small squares diagonally opposite each other that are divided into triangles. 7. Make a small "x" on the top corner of the page where it opens. 8. Next apply a thin line of glue around the perimeter of one square. 9. Attach the next square on top such that you match the "x" with an "o" at the corners. LeapingFrog creases, Fold, History, Tours, Iwata Travel, frog, Origami, backward, draw eyes, peice, Flip, frog jump, horizontal crease, bending paper, repeat. Ph: 604-684-5101 Toll Free: 1-800-311-9211 service@iwata-travel.ca www.iwata-travel.ca Iwata Travel would like to invite you to learn more about Asian arts and culture. We offer guided Zen Tours of Japan where you will visit sacred gardens, Buddhist temples, historic museums and much more. Please also ask about our NEW Obon Tour of Japanese History in the Lower Mainland. Fold the top-left corner inward to the edge of the paper then unfold, repeat with the top-right corner to form an 'X' with the creases. Press and release quickly to make the frog jump. Flip the peice over and draw eyes on it. kissthesky fold, lip, string, unfold, tape, pinch mark, spool, bottom, crease, triangle, valley fold, kiss, yanking, wind, loop. With the white side of the paper up, valley fold and unfold. 6. Fold the top layer of paper from the corner of the triangle to the pinch mark you made in step 4. 8. The top lip will now stand up towards you. You will require tape and string to get this fold into the air. Step 8 is the hard part (at least for me) Take one piece of string the length of the mouth from one side to another. Tape the other end to the back of the bottom lip. Now tie the spool to the loop of string you just made. origami_bird bird, mutation, wing, successful, circumference, Origami Bird, chick, parent, offspring, straw, evolution, lab, ring, dimensions, wing decreases. The Origami Bird (Avis papyrus) lives in dry regions of North Africa. Tape each loop 3 cm from the edge of the straw. 2. Breed offspring: Each Origami Bird has three offspring. A. The first egg has no mutations. To save time you may substitute the parent when testing this chick, rather than building a duplicate. For each chick, flip your coin and throw your die then record the results of the mutation based on the table below. The die throw determines how the mutations effect the wing. Record the dimensions of the most successful bird on the data table. orderform billing, order totaling, shipping, card, charges, Mississippi River, fabricorigami, AC/Phone, City/State/Zip, Washington State resident, items shipping charges, Unit Price, credit card, prior, shipping cost. *billing name/address must match billing on card. Note: UPS cannot deliver to a Post Office box. So please enter an address for delivery. International orders will be contacted by email with the shipping cost, prior to any charges to a credit card. bulletin1_back network, sectors, requirements analysis, community, learning, support, UKERNA, JANET, infrastructure, capturing, JISC, SuperJANET4, agenda, education, general requirements. The general requirements of the new network are already beginning to be recognised, as a consequence of clear trends over the recent years in the higher and further education sectors. It must address not only the net-work-level requirements, such as bandwidth needs and network resilience, but also higherlevel requirements such as applications and supporting intelligence (known as "middleware") within the network. Then it will truly meet the teaching, learning and research needs of the JANET community. In parallel with this, UKERNA is in discussion with a number of major users of JANET to focus in more depth on their requirements. lesson2origamiInstructions fold, crease, bottom, drinking cup, folding, Refold, triangle, square paper, Origami Cup Instructions. 1. Place your square paper like Figure A. 2. Fold the paper in half so that the bottom point meets the top point. 3. Crease along the fold so your paper looks like Figure B. 4. Using the top triangle, fold the top point down to the bottom fold as in Figure C. 5. Make a good crease in the fold, then open up to the top again to look like Figure B. 6. Fold point 1 up to point 2, crease the fold, and open back up. 10. Turn the cup over and make a similar fold, folding the top point down. 11. Open up, and you have a drinking cup! twinorigami knife, cutting, Origami, HENCKELS, ZWILLING, TWIN Origami, Asian, design, blade, knives, versatile, meat, herbs, vegetables, associations. ZWILLING J.A. HENCKELS is extending its knife range with an innovative and extremely versatile cutting tool that impresses not only with its functionality but also with its stunning design. Europeans have always been impressed by the ease and simplicity of Asian aesthetics that is reflected in the minimalist Far Eastern design applied to the new knife by ZWILLING J.A. HENCKELS. Most of all with the high demands in the Far East applied to good knives which correspond nicely with ZWILLING J.A. HENCKELS own strict quality requirements: perfect cutting properties provided by sharp blades. The short, curved blade is ideally suited for the multi-functional use in the Asian kitchen -- as a "mincing" knife for cutting herbs or as a paring knife for cleaning and cutting salads and vegetable. create-instructions fold, international origami symbols, arrow, drawing, dashes, creases, Thin, push, dots, Mountain fold, Valley fold. Mountain fold A series of dashes and dots If a drawing was marked with these symbols When a drawing is followed by this little looped arrow Page5 origami, dinosaurs, Japan, Drumheller, school, Kawahata, museum, origami exhibition, workshops, Origami Association, Prefecture, masters, Edmonton, display, Tomoko Fuse. By Isabell Fooks rently residing in Toyota City and is a She was born in Niigata Prefecture, Staff Writer member of the Japan Origami Japan and studied the art of origami Two of the world's best origami Association. Through his interpreter, Tomiko abroad by her method for combining Tomoko Fuse and Fumiaki Ohuchi, Kawahata told a school group folded-paper units in an insertion fashKawahata shared a few of their origami from Rocky Mountain House that he ion that results in an endless sequence skills with visitors to the museum and was always fond of dinosaurs since he of multidimensional variations giving conducted workshops for school was very small. 126_pdf students, paper cranes, plan, decorate, origami, kindness, school, Sadako, reading, art, lesson plan, tree, girls, Japanese, Japan. Random Acts of Kindness has brought more meaning into my life, and I am committed to help spread the word. · Sadako and the 1000 Paper Cranes by Eleanor Coerr, 63 pages with instructions in paper folding "origami" to make cranes, pages 66-79. Her visit (consisted of a three-week study of the culture and school environment of the Japanese society.) Before the visit, our school became completely immersed in the study of the Japanese culture by constructing an interdisciplinary unit that would focus on one aspect of Japanese life. The basis for the unit was that all students began reading the book, Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes by Eleanor Coerr. The students developed a plan that would enable them to decorate the floors of the hospital so children could enjoy the beauty of origami and learn the meaning of the cranes. Pr5 fold, flap, repeat, square, folded edge, upper flap, opposite, arrow, flip, Lift, pull, bottom, kite, crane, diamond. As you do this, flaps 1 and 2 should naturally begin to fold in along fold lines b-a, and c-a. The trick is to get the paper to lie flat in the long diamond shape shown here. Fold flap 1 to create fold line f-a. Then fold flap 2 to create fold line e-a. Then flip the entire figure over and repeat on the opposite side with flap 3 and flap 4. Pull out each one, in the direction of the arrows, as far as shown. Using your thumbnail, reverse the crease in the head, and pinch it to form the beak.
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