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Archive for 'Printable Patterns'

Holiday printables

holidayprintables

Download these cute holiday-themed printables – patterned papers, gift tags, and to-do lists – from A Print A Day.

Printable paperchain patterns

paperchain_patterns

Very cute festive printable patterns for making paper chains, courtesy of Nicole at Whipup!

Printable pattern roundup

printable paper designs

Living Locurto has a nice roundup of several sites with pretty printable patterns to download.

Deer & mushrooms printable

3661491401_a35ed11cd7

This deer and mushroom full-page printable design from Babalisme is super-kawaii! Shown below is a cute mini-notebook that she made from the paper:

36622878

PS – I’ve just added a new category – Printable Patterns - for this and other full-page printable pattern designs. These are great for making your own origami paper, or printing your own decorative paper for other projects like the notebook above. I’ve added our previous posts that featured printable patterns – check out the Printable Patterns category in the right sidebar for more resources –>

Tea Bag Folding

Tea bag folding is a paper craft that originated in Holland, where many tea bags come wrapped individually in paper packets. By cutting each bag down to a square, the bags can be folded and then combined into a geometric shape, just like in 2D modular origami. These medallions can be used to decorate handmade greeting cards, embellish your wrapped gifts, or you could try adding a hanging loop (glue the units together first!) to make an unusual Christmas decoration.
 teabag folding
Don’t let the name ‘tea bag folding’ put you off – you can perform this craft with any small squares of coloured paper. To give a more authentic result, the squares should be patterned, and each square should have the same pattern. There are many online resources that provide printable sheets of repeating patterns to cut into squares, and fold diagrams to produce different shapes. Google ‘tea bag folding’ and you will find many more links than I have provided here.
 
I’m going to demonstrate one fold pattern here to give you an idea of the method – hopefully it will inspire you to look more closely at this fairly obscure papercraft…
 
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Printable patterns

Pretty printable paper designs from Margit, who suggests printing them onto cardboard and making boxes out of them, but I think they would also work well for origami. You can’t go wrong with a cherry blossom design! [via CraftyPod]

Balloon lights tutorial

Here in New Zealand we are now in the middle of winter, and when playing around with some LED fairy lights I thought I would combine my love for origami and bringing some winter sparkle to our house. And so the balloon lights were born!!

Ok let’s get started with the tutorial!

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Review: Print Your Own Origami Paper

The Folding Trees Reviews are here to make your decisions easier. For each review, we make a project and report back on the difficulty, costs and time involved, plus any handy hints we developed along the way.

Whilst looking for resources to highlight on Folding Trees, I’ve come across several sites that offer printable origami patterns. Origami paper can be expensive and/or difficult to find, so to be able to print your favourite designs on demand sounds like a great solution. But what’s the print quality like? And how does it hold up to being folded into origami? Let’s find out…

In progress

printable origami paper review 

First impressions: looks good! Although it doesn’t have the texture or richness of the best origami papers, the pattern was distinct and the colours were lovely. The pattern I downloaded was a 8.5×11″ pdf file, so it filled an entire sheet of paper when I printed it onto regular white printer paper.

I decided to cut it into smaller squares, and I calculated that I could make 30 (5×6) 4cm squares from one sheet of printed paper – what a bargain! (Tip: a paper cutter is invaluable to speed up this stage!)

printable origami paper review

After cutting it into squares, it still looks great, but the real test is in the folding. I like to strongly crease my folds with my fingernail, and I thought this homemade origami paper might develop white lines along the folds after creasing…

Finished piece

printable origami paper review

No problem! No white lines, and the paper stood up well to folding. The paper was probably slightly thicker than regular origami paper, but it still came together well.

Verdict

Print only the designs and colours you like, on demand, at any time.

Notes

I folded all 30 of my 30 squares into one stellated icosahedron - I’m addicted to making them!

Level of difficulty

easy/kids to print the paper (I’m not rating the folding as that’s not the point of this review!)

Time

quick

Cost

low (recycle away) - as long as you already own a printer, this is essentially free!

Links

Here are some free patterns that you can use for all types of printing projects. And here are some sites with origami paper patterns available to download and print:

If you try printing some origami paper, show us what you do with it in the Folding Trees flickr group!