Today is origami.
Origami (折り紙?, from ori meaning "folding", and kami meaning "paper") is the traditional Japanese folk art of paper folding, which started in the 17th century AD and was popularized in the mid-1900s. It has since then evolved into a modern art form. The goal of this art is to transform a flat sheet of material into a finished sculpture through folding and sculpting techniques, and as such the use of cuts or glue are not considered to be origami.
The number of basic origami folds is small, but they can be combined in a variety of ways to make intricate designs. The most well known origami model is probably the Japanese paper crane. In general, these designs begin with a square sheet of paper whose sides may be different colors or prints. Traditional Japanese origami, which has been practiced since the Edo era (1603–1867), has often been less strict about these conventions, sometimes cutting the paper or using nonsquare shapes to start with.
(From Wikipedia)
I used to do a lot of origami in 4th grade but since I lost the book I only know how to make a piano, fish and crane. Well I tried figuring out Ron Petrese's logic puzzle and it has some inconsistencies and needs one more solid clue to solve. Bye for now.
Jasmine Crespo
P.S.
The obvious teems in to what appears wrong. Though something dark (yet light) lies within. It started small but grew big way before its time. Only one will know or find out. Most likely for the secret is immense and the keeper not so trusting. All shall be revealed on the morrow by some way over this weekend.
*Notice one dead give away is if I'm reading Romeo and Juliet
The Second is what that is.
The third explains part.
After the third the fourth explains all.
Too bad tomorrow is the 17th.
Or maybe not.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
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