Nips and Tucks Origami Tessellation
This original origami tessellation is a little different than my usual. It uses isosceles
triangles in a triad pattern.
It's a somewhat difficult tessellation. There are a lot of small and fussy folds. At the same time, it's a pretty simple pattern. That could probably be said of many origami tessellations.
Another way to describe them would be to say that they are the edges of large hexagons. Their long side spans two natural small rhombuses of the triangle grid. The two shorter sides follow the grid.
I positioned them around a triangle twist so that they collapse to form a larger triangle.
In order to repeat the pattern, they alternate around a small hexagonal twist. This principle is illustrated much better in the crease pattern included at the end.
The final piece of the puzzle are the shapes that form in the remaining gaps. They are slightly unusual, but not undocumented. They do appear, here and there, in various other tessellations. Their pattern is one cross grid, two following the grid and then repeat until the circuit is closed. This shape is also made much clearer in the diagram below.
Filed under: August 2025 Origami Tessellations
It's a somewhat difficult tessellation. There are a lot of small and fussy folds. At the same time, it's a pretty simple pattern. That could probably be said of many origami tessellations.
Another way to describe them would be to say that they are the edges of large hexagons. Their long side spans two natural small rhombuses of the triangle grid. The two shorter sides follow the grid.
I positioned them around a triangle twist so that they collapse to form a larger triangle.
In order to repeat the pattern, they alternate around a small hexagonal twist. This principle is illustrated much better in the crease pattern included at the end.
The final piece of the puzzle are the shapes that form in the remaining gaps. They are slightly unusual, but not undocumented. They do appear, here and there, in various other tessellations. Their pattern is one cross grid, two following the grid and then repeat until the circuit is closed. This shape is also made much clearer in the diagram below.
Filed under: August 2025 Origami Tessellations
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