Origami Science and Art
Proceedings of the Second International Meeting of Origami
Science and Scientific Origami
Otsu, Japan, November 29-December 2, 1994.
Editor in Chief: Koryo Miura.
Published by the organizing comittee with the support of
the Seian University of Art and Design, 1997.
560 pages.
All papers are in English, except those noted.
Table of Contents
- Fujimoto successive method to obtain odd-number
section of a segment or an angle by folding operations,
Humiaki Kuzita and Shuzo Fujimoto
- Towards a methematical throey of origami, Jacques
Justin
- R(gamma)=1, Toshikazu Kawasaki
- Fold - its physical and mathematical principles,
Koryo Miura
- Four-dimensional origami, Koji Miyazaki
- The technique to fold free flaps of formative art
"ORIGAMI", Fumiaki Kawahata
- The tree method of origami design, Robert J. Lang
- Folding of uniform plane tessellations, Tibor Tarnai
- Folded and unfolded nature, Biruta Kresling
- Similarity in origami, Jun Maekawa
- Breaking symmetry: origami, architecture, and the forms
of nature, Peter Engel
- Discrete symmetric origami structures: dissigami,
Misha Litvinov
- Planar graphs and modular origami, Thomas Hull
- Origami-model of crystal structure, II. Spindel and
corundum structures, Shozo Ishihara
- The platonic solids and its interrelated solids, Shuzo
Fujimoto
- Molecular modeling of fullerenes with modular origami,
Louis A. Cuccia, R. Bruce Lennox, and Francis M.Y. Ow
- Envelope-folding useful for chemical education,
(in Japanese) Shukichi Yamana
- Finding convex deltahedra through origami, Youko Horii
- Polyhedron origami: a possible formulation by "simple
units", Miyuki Kawamura
- Modular origami polyhedra, Rona Gurkewitz
- Symmetry in two- and three-dimensional origami with
knotted tape, Heinz Strobl
- A study on the twist in quadrangular origami tubes,
(in Japanese) Noriko Nagata
- Proposal of a term "origamics" for plastic origami -
workless scientific origami, (in Japanese) Kazuo Haga
- Origami as an aid to understanding symmetry groups,
Junko Nitta
- Hypergami: a computational system for creating decorated
paper constructions, Michael Eisenberg and Ann Nishioka
- Using origami as a teaching tool, (in Japanese) Toshinori
Tanaka
- Teaching origami to develop visual/spatial perception,
Judy Hall
- Physically handicapped and origami, Saburo Kase
- Origamic architecture, (in Japanese, English abstract)
Masahiro Chatani
- Tridimensional transformations of paper by cutting and
folding, Ramin Razani
- Artistic tiling problem by origami, Peterpaul Forcher
- Extruding and tessellating polygons from a plane, Chris
K. Palmer
- Hikari-ori reflective folding, James Minoru Sakoda
- Lines meeting on a surface; the "MARS" paperfolding, Paulo
Taborda Barreto
- Creative origami "snow crystals": some new approaches to
geometric origami, Kunio Suzuki
- Art, origami and education, John Smith
- Form of origami, Yoshihide Momotani
- Origami fractal, Kenzo Takei
- Block origami system, (in Japanese, English abstract)
Yoshio Sato
- Traditional and technical, David Brill
- Thoughts on the future of origami design: something old,
something new, Herman Van Goubergen
- One crease origami: less is more, Paul Jackson
- Image game, Kunihki Kasahara
- The cube story told in modular-origami language, Tomoko
Fuse
- Movement of nature and folding line structures and others,
Akira Yoshizawa
- Origami and motivation, Thoki Yenn
- How the origami model explains the theory of
kikujutsu, Toshiyuki Iwasaki
- The origins of origami or the other side to origami,
(in Japanese) Makio Araki
- The roots of origami and its cultural background,
Koya Ohashi
- Some observations on the history of paperfolding in
Japan and the West - a development in parallel, David Lister
- Another view of the word "origami", Masao Okamura
- Right angle billiard games and their solutions by
folding paper, Humiaki Huzita
How to obtain a copy
As of this writing (12/29/97) this Proceedings book is only
available by mail-order from Japan, directly from one of the editors,
Toshikazu
Kawasaki. It is advertised on the
Origami Detectives web page as
costing 5000 yen.
Thus, to buy a copy email
KAWASAKI Toshikazu.
You will have to send Dr. Kawasaki a postal money order in yen.
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