by Yossi Nir
A neat box and the math underlying it.
A box you will enjoy folding again and again.
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by Miyuki Kawamura
A house that makes a convenient gift box.
by Yossi Nir
A nifty, portable container.
by Arsalan Wares
Decorate your own paper, or print Arsalan’s designs, but do fold this box!
by Arsalan Wares
A deep, square box along with some math.
by Govind Kulkarni, with text and diagrams by Hans Dybkjær
Two different folding sequences to arrive at almost the same box.
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A one-piece box designed as a wedding favor.
A bowl with variations and an excellent way to cut a pentagon from kaleidoscope paper.
by Arsalan Wares
A hexagonal box, some printable papers and some math.
How to expand a crease pattern to change the shape of a model.
by Arsalan Wares
The author shows how a modular origami box with a square base can be made from four rectangular sheets plus a template. He also discusses some mathematics in the context of the constructed box.
A printable crease pattern and photo diagrams for the top along with directions for making a masu box bottom to fit.
The Weimar Bowl would also make an attractive tea light holder.
by Arsalan Wares
A sturdy modular box and the mathematics behind it.
A two-piece icosahedron that’s a gift box and an ornament.
A gift box that pops open in the most delightful way.
A tetrahedral gift box with a secure closure and a loop for hanging.
A box that opens with a pull and springs closed ... along with a variation.
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An enticing candy dish used by the author to hold wedding candies.
by Christiane Bettens (Mélisande)
A tato — created to honor healthcare workers — that can be transformed into a twist box with a few additional folds.
An attractive box that makes good use of both sides of the paper and is easy to fold.
A box with a raised square — or a heart — on top. It was inspired by Thoki Yenn's Crossed Box Pleat.
by Jane Rosemarin
What's in issue 54 of The Fold, and who is the new editor? You'll also find diagrams for her favorite origami design.
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by Arnold Tubis
A folding method for closed masu boxes from a single square, generalized to masu-like structures with regular polygonal bases.
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by Arnold Tubis, John Andrisan, and Christopher Pooley
Part two in a series examining the mathematics behind the golden ratio in some geometric boxes.
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by Arnold Tubis and Christopher Pooley
Tubis and Pooley explore \(n\)-sided generalizations of the masu and one of its many decorative-lids. Detailed video instructions are provided at the Origami Player site.
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A rotationally symmetric geometric shape, folded from a hexagon, based on Jeannine Mosely's "Bud".
Diagrams and video tutorial for a color-change box modular.
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by Arnold Tubis and Crystal E. Mills
A method for making four-compartment side–to–side or corner–to–corner divider inserts for prism-shape containers with square faces is generalized so as to produce n equal compartments of specified height for a container with an n–sided regular-polygon face.