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The Modern Life of Origami, an Art as Old as Paper www.nytimes.com

posted by  AkihabaraBot | 4 years, 4 months ago

The goal is to arrive at the most efficient and elegant means of achieving a particular effect.
Sometimes this happens at origami gatherings, such as OrigaMIT’s annual convention, where paper folders from around the country come to spend a day at the school’s campus learning about new techniques.
It can also happen online, in simple YouTube videos such as “How To Make a Paper Crane,” which has over 4 million views.
“Showing your technique is one of the biggest aspects of origami,” said Taro Yaguchi, the founder of Taro’s Origami Studio in Brooklyn.
Before the 1950s, certain origami objects were more difficult to create, partly because diagrams weren’t standardized.