Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
This is a video for an origami box. To start with we're going to use one sheet of paper
that's going to be with the white side up and I'm going to use a diagonal fold. So just
go ahead and get all the corners to line up here, so the top two corner where it's not
to the side, but right on top of it. Go ahead and make a diagonal crease all the way across,
nice sharp corners there. Open it back up and then do the other diagonal as well.
What this is going to do, is this is going to tell us where the exact center of the paper
is. That X right there, should be nice and calculated to the center of the paper. So
what we're going to do now is called a blintz base. We're going to take all four corners
of the paper and we're going to fold them into that exact middle, and you want to be
as precise as you can with this one. So get each of those where they line up right on
there, as best you can. Try not to bother the neighbors as we say, so that you don't
have the paper folded up on top of each one. It should be just butted right up next to
them.
Do that on all four corners and that is called a blintz base. Now after you have that we're
going to do what's called a cabinet fold. We're going to take both edges of the paper
and we're going to fold them into the center. I'll show you what it sort of looks like the
way cabinet or cupboard doors open up, once you get both of those edges to butt up right
into the middle, sort of like a cabinet door just like that. Now once we have that we fold
it, and then unfolded it, and now we're going to open up the top and the bottom flaps.
So go ahead and keep the left and the right in place, and then once we open this back
up fold this two back in, using the same crease line we just made just like that. Great, the
next step we're going to do two diagonal folds that are going to line up right on the edges
of this white square. So you see how the white turns into the blue right there. I'm going
to fold this over right along that line, and when you do, what should line up is this edge
right here, this crease should line up right along that center line. And this point right
here, where it changes, should line up right along that top line.
We're going to do it one way, open it up, and then do it the other way as well just
like that. We're going to do that on the left side and then also the right hand side. So
we fold it over, as far as we can right up like that, and then the other one comes up
as well. All right, so all those creases give us everything we need to make the box. What's
going to happen is I'm going to take these two panels that were the cupboard doors. We're
going to pick them up a little bit, so that they come up at a 90 degree angle, so that
they come right up straight up into the air.
And now I'm going to take this back panel and I'm going to pick it up into the air just
like this, and you see how we're using these creases that we already made, it makes a little
panel right here, this little flap and we can fold that down right over the top, and
that'll lock all the folds we made right into place. And we do the same thing on the other
side. So what happens is these two spots right here, these two triangles sort of fold down,
as we bring this panel up. You see how everything lines up there nice and even.
And then we fold this panel right over the top, and try to get as much paper folded over
the top of it as you can, to lock it into place. You should have most of the creases
you need, in order to make that happen, so follow all the creases you already have and
that right there gets you a easy origami box. And what you can do to make it a gift box
is make one with just a little bit of a smaller sheet of paper or just a little bit of a bigger
sheet of paper, and the two will fit right on top of each other, and that'll give you
an origami box.