Term | Definition |
---|---|
A4 | A rectangular paper size where the longer edge is equal to the diagonal of a square formed by the shorter edge, maintaining a 1:√2 ratio. |
Action model | An origami creation that performs an action, like flying, flapping, or popping. |
Adult origami | Origami with mature or erotic themes, also known as Naughty Origami or Pornigami. |
AEP | Spanish Paperfolding Association. |
Back-coating | Bonding two different sheets, like tissue and foil, to create one laminated sheet. |
Base | A starting fold structure used as the foundation for creating various origami models. |
Bird base | A standard base made by petal folding both sides of a preliminary base. |
Book fold | Folding one side of the square across to meet the opposite edge, like closing a book. |
BOGS | British Origami Gourmet Society—folders who enjoy paper folding during meals. |
BOS | British Origami Society. |
Blintz | Folding all four corners of a square toward the center. |
Box-pleating | A technique involving paper pleats to produce narrow points, developed by Neal Elias. |
Bronco sinkin | A legendary fold or mythical origami figure. |
Canson | A French paper brand often used in wet-folding. |
CDO | Centro Diffusione Origami—Italy’s national origami group. |
Chapeaugraphy | The transformation of a felt ring into various hat shapes. |
Circular origami | Origami that starts with a circular sheet of paper. |
Closed sink | A sink fold done without unfolding the model first. |
Collapse | Bringing together layers of a pre-creased paper into a new form. |
Convention | A gathering of paperfolders, usually over a weekend. |
Crane | A refined version of the flapping bird model with a slimmer neck and tail. |
Crease | A fold line in paper. |
Crease pattern | A map of all folds in a completed origami model, visible when unfolded flat. |
Cupboard fold | Folding both the left and right edges of a square to meet at the center. |
Diagonal fold | Folding one corner across to the opposite corner to create a diagonal crease. |
Diamond base | A base made by folding pairs of edges toward a diagonal line of a square. |
Dog base | A folding base used for animal models, created by John Montroll. |
Dollar Bill Fold | See money folding—using banknotes as origami paper. |
Duo | Paper that has a different color on each side. |
Elephant Hide | Durable German-made paper favored for wet-folding. |
ELFA | A group that studies the history and science of envelope and letter folding. |
Elias pleating | Another name for box-pleating, developed by Neal Elias. |
Fabrigami | Origami done with stiffened or laminated fabric. |
Fish base | A base commonly used as a foundation for fish models. |
Flapping Bird | A traditional origami bird model with movable wings. |
Flasher | A flexible model that expands or contracts in a twisting motion. |
Flexagon | A folded model with hidden faces that can be flipped inside out. |
Foil | Paper backed with a layer of metallic foil. |
Fold | To bend a sheet of paper so two parts come into contact. |
Fold line | A visual cue in diagrams that indicates where a crease should be made. |
Folded edge | Where a paper’s edges meet and overlap due to folding. |
Folding geometry | The mathematical structure and angles behind an origami model. |
Folding Australia | An Australian organization dedicated to the practice and promotion of origami. |
Folding level | A classification system to indicate the difficulty of a model, from simple to super-complex. |
Frog base | A complex base created by petal folding the flaps of a waterbomb base. |
Fudge Factor | A small margin intentionally left when folding to accommodate paper thickness. |
Golden Venture | A modular folding style using small triangular units fitted together. |
Grain of paper | The direction in which paper naturally flexes more easily, based on its manufacturing process. |
Inverted | A point or flap that has been turned inside out. |
IOS | International Origami Society, founded by Akira Yoshizawa in Japan. |
Iso-area folding | A folding method that reveals equal areas of both sides of the paper. |
JOAS | Japanese Origami Academic Society, often called the Tanteidan or ‘detectives’. |
Joss paper | Paper traditionally burned at Chinese funerals, often folded into symbolic items. |
Judgement fold | A fold made without exact reference points; the location is estimated by eye. |
Kasane origami | A Japanese term for decorative layered folding. |
Kami paper | Standard, high-quality origami paper, often colored on one side. |
Kan-no-mado | A historic Japanese book detailing how to fold 1,000 cranes from one sheet. |
Knotologie | A method using long strips to fold knotted structures, developed by Heinz Strobl. |
Kirigami | The Japanese art of paper cutting, typically applied to folded paper. |
Kirikomi origami | A style that uses deliberate cuts in paper to expand folding possibilities. |
Kite Fold | A fold where two adjacent edges are brought to meet a diagonal line. |
Kusudama | A Japanese term for decorative paper spheres made of modular flower units. |
Landmark | A visual or structural target on the paper, such as a corner or crease intersection, used to guide folds. |
Location points | Specific positions on the paper that serve as references for accurate folding. |
Manoeuvre | A sequence of folds that together achieve a particular result, like creating a rabbit ear. |
MFPP | Mouvement Français des Plieurs de Papier – the French origami society. |
Mini-meeting | A small informal gathering of origami enthusiasts. |
Minimalist origami | A design style that captures the essence of a subject using very few folds. |
Minor Miracle | An American term for a clever procedure that simplifies complex flap movement. |
Miura-ori map | A special type of map fold developed by Dr. Miura that allows efficient unfolding. |
Model | The final folded origami creation, though some prefer the term ‘design’. |
Modular origami | Origami where multiple identical units are joined to form complex structures. |
Module | A single unit or part of a modular origami creation. |
Money folding | The art of using banknotes to fold figures or shapes. |
Mountain fold | A fold that creates a raised crease, with the paper bending away from you. |
Movement arrow | A diagram symbol showing the direction a flap or layer should move. |
Multi piece origami | Using more than one sheet of paper to construct a model. |
NOA | Nippon Origami Association – a Japanese origami organization. |
Noshi | Decorative folded paper traditionally attached to gifts in Japan. |
OD | Origami Deutschland – the German origami society. |
One crease origami | An experimental approach exploring what can be done with just a single fold. |
Origami | The Japanese art of paper folding. |
OSN | Origami Societeit Nederland – the Dutch origami organization. |
OUSA | Origami USA – a major American origami society. |
Painting with paper | A technique using contrasting paper sides to create stylized visual scenes. |
Pajarita | A traditional Spanish origami figure resembling a small bird. |
Paper plane | A folded paper aircraft, often designed for flight. |
PCOC | Pacific Coast Origami Conference – one of two large U.S. origami gatherings. |
Petal fold | A technique where a point is raised and narrowed by folding the sides inward. |
Poppadom | A playful term for origami fans who fold while dining, especially on Indian cuisine. |
Precreasing | Folding then unfolding to create guiding creases for later steps. |
Preliminary base | A foundational base formed from intersecting valley and diagonal folds. |
Pure origami | A style where no cuts, glue, or decorations are used. |
Pureland origami | A system restricting folds to only valleys and mountains. |
RAT | An informal fold placed by eye, abbreviation for ‘Right About There’. |
Raw edge | An original outer edge of the paper, often left exposed. |
Rabbit’s ear | A fold creating a triangular flap by combining edges to a central line. |
Reference Finder | A computer tool by Robert Lang to find fold sequences matching target coordinates. |
Reverse fold | Folding a flap inside or outside along existing creases. |
Silver rectangle | A term describing A4 paper, coined by John Cunliffe. |
Sink | Pushing part of a model inward along four crease lines. |
Skeletal polyhedra | Modular structures where paper forms the edges, leaving hollow faces. |
Soft crease | A fold made gently to avoid forming a sharp or permanent crease. |
Sonobe Unit | A foundational modular unit by Mitsunobu Sonobe, featuring flaps and pockets for geometric constructions. |
Squash | A technique where a flap is spread open and flattened, often symmetrically. |
Stellated | Describes a model with pointed, star-like extensions. |
Stretched bird base | Created by pulling the wing tips of a bird base to extend the model. |
Surface | Either side of a sheet of paper used in folding. |
Swivel fold | A fold where the paper pivots in multiple directions to form a new structure. |
Tanteidan | Japanese for ‘detectives’, the society focused on advanced origami design. |
Tension | When folds are held in position by the natural resistance of the paper. |
Tessellation | A repeating pattern formed by twisting and collapsing paper. |
Tissue Foil Tissue | Laminated foil paper made by bonding tissue to both sides of a metal foil layer. |
Treemaker | Software by Robert Lang that generates crease patterns from a stick-figure layout. |
Twist folding | Using pleats to collapse paper into spiral or twisted forms. |
Unit origami | Modular origami composed of interlocking units. |
Valley fold | A fold made by bringing paper toward the folder to form a V-shaped crease. |
Washi | Traditional Japanese handmade paper, often including natural fibers. |
Waterbomb | An inflatable model that forms a box-like shape, traditionally filled with water. |
Waterbomb base | A base structure created with intersecting folds resembling the Union Jack. |
Wet-folding | A method where dampened paper is used to create sculptural, lasting folds. |
Windmill fold | A fold pattern that forms a pinwheel or windmill-like shape. |
X-ray view | Diagram showing hidden creases as dotted lines for instructional clarity. |
Yakko-san | A classic Japanese model representing a figure in traditional attire. |
Yunitto origami | The Japanese term for modular unit origami. |