Origami: Striped Box


Striped Box

Striped Box, designed by me

Once a year I run a little origami class for kids, for someone I know.  As a self-imposed constraint, I always teach modular origami.  It’s hard to find simple modular origami models that kids can do in a reasonable amount of time!

I’ve wanted to make a modular origami box, and a big one so that it can hold other origami inside.  So I bought some colored A4 paper, and looked around for a simple box design.  None of them were quite to my liking, so I made my own design.  There’s no lid for this box, because we’re keeping it simple.  I have folding diagrams if you’d like to try.

striped box diagrams

The trickiest part is connecting the fourth unit, and I didn’t really draw diagrams showing it in detail.  It’s much easier to show in a classroom.  So if you’re doing this at home by yourself, unfortunately you’re doing it on hard mode.

During class, one of the parents pointed out an alternate way to fit the pieces together, and I decided that her way was better than mine.  So afterwards I went back and adjusted the design (the diagrams above show the newer version).  Even simple designs like this are iterative.

Comments

  1. bubble says

    this one is friendly for beginners like me 🙂 also the color reminds me a popsicle from my childhood, I don’t remember the brand name.

  2. says

    Whenever I put yellow and red together, people tell me: it’s ketchup and mustard.

    So… I assume that’s what your popsicles were made of.

  3. says

    Oh I have a recent origami story.

    So I have this book of complicated origami animals, and my son saw that one of the designs is a beetle and he simply NEEDED me to make it for him. (I can’t believe none of the parenting books ever mentioned this.) So I did. He was very happy with it and took it to daycare because he always brings a toy or something to daycare.

    But also, it seems kind of unnatural to me, to make something with 6 skinny little legs out of a flat piece of paper, makes me think it must be difficult to design something like that.

    Anyway, do you ever make origami bugs with skinny legs and/or get requests from small children about things they want you to make?

  4. says

    Yeah, I occasionally offer to make stuff for young relatives, and I ask if they have any requests. Then I just look up videos online.

    In origami design, an important concept is the number of “points” in a model. “Points” include such things as legs or antenna. So there’s something called the origami insect wars (or bug wars) where a bunch of origamists competed to make increasingly complicated insects with more and more points.

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