Overview
Intricate, clever animal designs that used to take hours now can be finished in minutes, thanks to revolutionary new "Seven Steps to Folding Heaven" techniques and shortcut tips. Just as impressive are the designs themselves which look as if only a master at the craft could have made them. Actually, great artists did create the designs, but the instructions come from an expert in the art of time-saving folding techniques. A section on folding seven types of animals' heads prepares you to use the same methods to create 14 whimsical animals, including a Sleeping Cow, Bloodhound, Bat, Panda, Frog, Tadpole, Monkey, Rhino, and Giraffe, along with five fantastic dinosaurs including a Wooly Mammoth, T-rex, Apatosaurus, and an action Pteranadon head.Synopsis
In no time you can fold whimsical origami animals to delight young and old alike. Using only two types of folds, you'll make a whole menagerie of creatures, from an impish monkey to a cool-looking T-rex. They'll come to life quickly in your hands, enabling you to create a variety of displays for your home and an assortment of imaginative gifts.
School Library Journal
Gr 5 Up-Robinson offers 26 paper creatures selected for speedy folding. Ranging from frog to rhino, from a dollar-bill elephant to a baby dinosaur head done in just four steps, all but eight models are his own designs or variations on traditional ones. For each, he provides captioned color photos showing each step, a view of a finished model, and a "studio" shot of a more elaborate version, done with fancy paper and placed in a simple, evocative setting. Unfortunately, though most of the models themselves are within the physical capabilities of even primary-grade children, inexperienced paper folders of any age are likely be frustrated by the absence of directional arrows, reference points, or any other diagramming on the step photos. Furthermore, the author's reassurance that there are only two kinds of creases, the valley fold and the mountain fold, is simplistic, begging the fact that some models here require reverse folding, pleats, or squash folds, plus the ability, which seldom comes without plenty of practice, to judge just how to angle them for a natural-looking ear, eye, or other feature. Still, folders looking for models that can be created in a few moments, or easily taught to younger children, will find plenty of possibilities here.-John Peters, New York Public Library Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.