Chutes and Ladders Origami Tessellation

Chutes and Ladders Origami Tessellation

 This is a rare white paper tessellation. I have this large pile of 28 lb printer paper that I got to fold tessellations. Then, I later discovered tant paper and the printer paper has mostly gone unused. 

But, to be fair, it backlights wonderfully. However, it is very susceptible to moisture. So, pros and cons. 

Under the right circumstance, it's a great paper with which to fold origami tessellations. The trick is to weigh the complexity of the design, the relative humidity and how the finished fold will look using it. 

A big part of the process of creating tessellations for me, is deciding what paper to use. It seems simple, but it's not. And it has a big impact on your finished model. 

This tessellation is a series of alternating rhombuses and triangles. They are connected at a greater distance than I typically utilize. Thus, creating different shapes in the gaps. 

When I looked at the picture of the finished fold it reminded me of that board game that I played as a child. That's where I got the name. 

Back view Chutes and Ladders Tess

It wasn't too difficult to fold. It's an intermediate difficulty tess for sure. The broader spacing saw to that. The parallelogram shapes on the reverse side tripped me up a little bit as I didn't pre-crease. But it all worked out just fine. 

My diagram is included. 


Diagram to fold Chutes and Ladders Tessellation

Filed under: Novermber 2025 Origami Tessellations
This has been an original post created by SolvingOrigamiTessellations.com

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