μ-reversefold
Over the Christmas break I went to Chinatown in San Francisco and got some new origami paper which is smaller than any of my other paper. I quickly decided to make one of my signature reversefolds with the new paper. I started creasing the paper and got to the sane point, which would have given me 4 rows of reversefolds. This would have been small, but not small enough for me. I like my folds to be more complicated.
Yes, that paper is less than 2 quarters wide. Of course, going one more level took a lot of careful and precise folding which took the rest of the night. The next day I started the accordion folds which are the base of the final product.
That took several hours. The last step is to pop in the reverse folds, one row at a time. This is the most time consuming part of the process and for this fold it took me several nights with a small crafting tool. Here it is with five rows finished.
And after many painstaking hours of work, here is the finished product:
And for a little perspective here is a shot of the finished fold compared to the original paper:
And just in case the quarter wasn’t enough, here’s the finished fold in my palm. Yes, it is that small. No, I won’t make you one. ;-)
All of these photos link to my newly created flickr account. The entire set is up there along with higher quality versions.









