Easy Butterfly Origami

My new book, Easy Butterfly Origami features 30 bold full-color patterns designed to accurately portray the dorsal and ventral sides of some of the most beautiful butterflies from around the world!

Origami Folding Tips

Origami, from the Japanese ori (to fold) and kami (paper), began in the 6th century when Buddhist monks introduced paper to Japan. The print-and-fold crafts and easy diagrams are designed to help children with fine motor skills, directions and hand eye coordination. Some basic origami folding tips:
  • Print and cut out patterns carefully.
  • Fold with clean, dry hands.
  • Follow the instructions. Study the diagrams and be patient.
  • Be precise: fold each crease well, flattening the creases by running your fingertip over the fold.
  • Folding the paper away from you is easier than folding towards you.
  • Be creative...use your origami on greeting cards, holiday decorations, table place cards and bookmarks.
Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts

Bat-Toad?

Halloween is around the corner, so you'd think that this is a Photoshopped image of a toad ready for a night of Trick-or-Treating in his bat costume.


Except this is not an altered image. This photo was taken by park ranger Yufani Olaya at a remote guard station in Peru's Cerros de Arnotape National Park. In an interview with Rainforest Expeditions (blog.perunature.com), Olaya says that "out of nowhere the bat just flew directly into the mouth of the toad, which almost seemed to be sitting with its mouth wide open."

The mountainous Cerrros de Arnotape National Park, where Olaya took the photo, is spread out over 90,000 hectares. The park's geography features a combination of dry tropical forests and zones, arid zones, and Andean mountain range ecosystems that support a tremendous amount of biodiversity such as Andean condors, spotted cats, red deer, gray deer, anteaters, spectacled bears, Guayaquil squirrels and scarlet macaws. 

To learn why the bat may have been flying so close to the ground, and what happened to it, read the full article at Rainforest Expeditions.

To fold an origami bat, click here.
To fold an origami frog, click here.
Frog Origami

Halloween Crafts and Origami: Black Cats


Print and Fold a pair of Origami Black Cats for Halloween!

Choose a cat to print:

Happy?
Scary!



Difficulty: Easy for Children


Directions:




1. Print and cut out origami along outer solid lines.





2. Fold back diagonally as shown.





3. Turn your origami over, so that the printed side faces down.





4. Fold ear down diagonally, as shown. Repeat on other side.





5. Fold ear up as shown. Repeat on other side.





6a. Turn origami over with printed side up. Fold back white "tip" on top of cat's head.
6b. Repeat with the white corner on cat's chin.
6c. Now your cat is pau! (done)!





©2009 Tammy Yee
All rights reserved.

Halloween: Pumpkin Mask

Print, cut and add ties...Happy Halloween!



©2010 Tammy Yee
All rights reserved.

Halloween: Monster Mask

Print, cut and add ties...Happy Halloween!


MORE HALLOWEEN CRAFTS AND ORIGAMI FOR KIDS
©2010 Tammy Yee
All rights reserved.

Halloween: Skull Mask

Print, cut and add ties...Happy Halloween!





©2010 Tammy Yee
All rights reserved.

Halloween Skeleton

Make an articulated Dangling Skeleton for Halloween:





Difficulty: Easy

Materials:

  1. Skeleton print out
  2. Scissors
  3. Hole puncher
  4. Paper fasteners


Directions:

1. Print and cut out skeleton parts along outer lines.
PRINT:




2. Using a hole puncher, punch out red circles on joint tabs.

3. Assemble your skeleton using paper fasteners to secure the joints.





Have a safe and happy Halloween!

MORE FUN HALLOWEEN CRAFTS AND ORIGAMI FOR CHILDREN



©2009 Tammy Yee
All rights reserved.

Halloween Monster Origami

Print and Fold a Monster Origami for Halloween!



Difficulty: Easy

Directions: (Follow the same directions as Cinco de Mayo doll)

1a. Print and cut out Halloween Monster's face and graveyard headstone along outer solid line.


1b. Cut out Halloween Monster body along outer solid line.
1c. Turn Halloween Monster body over so that the printed side is facing down.





2a. Crease along diagonal line as shown. Unfold.
2b. Repeat crease along diagonal line on other side, as shown. Unfold.
2c. Turn origami over so that the printed side faces up.
2d. Crease down along horizontal line as shown. Unfold.






3a. With printed side facing down, carefully "tent" fold upper body forward, as shown.
3b. Fold Halloween Monster's legs forward, as shown.
3c. Repeat on other side.





4a. Glue head onto body.
4b. Glue graveyard headstone as desired.
4c. Your Halloween Monster Origami doll is finished!

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!


©2011 Tammy Yee. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or altered without consent.

Halloween Pinwheel Spider

Classic Pinwheel for your pencil eraser.
Not suitable for young children.



Difficulty: Easy

Materials:

  1. Paper
  2. Scissors
  3. Sewing pin
  4. Pencil with eraser head


Directions:


1. Print and cut out web and spider.



2. Cut pinwheel web along diagonal red lines.

3. Using the photo as a guide, push the sewing pin first through the red dot on spider, then through the dots on the paper pinwheel. Insert pin into eraser head. (Not suitable for young children.)

Have a safe and happy Halloween!


©2009 Tammy Yee
All rights reserved.

Halloween Crafts and Origami: Pumpkin Box


Print and fold a Pumpkin Treat Box for Halloween!



Print Pumpkin Box

Print Directions



Difficulty: Easy



Directions:




1a. Print and cut out box along outer solid line.

1b. Make cuts on the "pumpkin halves" as shown, along the black lines only. Do not cut beyond the points indicated by the red dots.





2a - d. With printed side facing down, fold and unfold along the solid black lines as indicated, to form the sides of the box.
2e. Your box should be creased as shown.



3a - c. Repeat the process along the outer lines to form the lid of the box.

3d. Your box should now be creased as shown.





4a. Note the diagonal lines marked in red.
4b. Fold the sides of the box up as shown, creasing along these diagonal lines to form the corners of the box.

4c. Secure the box by interlocking the pumpkin halves along the cuts you made in step 1b.



©2009 Tammy Yee
All rights reserved.

Halloween: Owl Mask

Great Horned Owl Mask

Difficulty: Easy





Materials:
  1. Heavyweight paper
  2. Scissors
  3. Clear paper tape

Directions:

1. Print and cut out Owl Mask:

Great Horned Owl Mask




2. Cut out holes for eyes.




3a. Overlap tab as shown and secure with tape.

3b. Repeat on other side.

3c. From the backside, you can see how the tabs overlap, and how this creates a rounded look.




4a. Crease owl beak along center fold, and secure with tape as shown.

4b. From the underside, you can see how this creates a three dimensional beak.




5. Fold in beak tabs as shown. Turn beak over.








6a. Apply tape to beak as shown...

6b. And secure to Owl Mask as shown, using the white areas on the mask as a guide.




Have a safe and Happy Halloween!


©2009 Tammy Yee
All rights reserved.



Copyright ©2009 Tammy Yee
All rights reserved. No portion of this web site may be reproduced without prior written consent.