![]() ![]() Step 5: Mentally prepare to do this 29 more times. This is incredibly funny, because you yourself often use highly confusing arrows when taking notes and whatnot, and you can read them just fine, most of the time. Then, you attempt to read the highly confusing arrows by comparing consecutive steps. Videos are slow and annoying, you think, as you flashback to that one time you made a half hour long video on how to fold a basic origami rose. Therefore, you turn to the internet, and thankfully, you find one (1) visual sheet of instructions on Pinterest (you are reluctant to use Pinterest for absolutely no reason, but you’re desperate, ok?). Normally, you rely on that one book you got when you went to China at like, 12, but that one had sadistic tendencies, as proven by its instructions to cut your paper in half. Fun fact: after hours of painstakingly aligned edges and carefully coaxed corners, the tape’s falling apart and it’s sagging, abandoned, on a lonely dresser island. You have to do this, because you have the memory of a goldfish when it comes to things that aren’t completely useless (like your school computer password from grade 3) and you can’t remember how to make them despite having made 60 of them in a row a few months ago. ![]() Step 3: Find the instructions for a “little turtle” unit on the internet. Based on the internet, you are fairly sure you’re supposed to have bright, funky colours spread more widely along the colour spectrum, but you’re unoriginal and a disappointment to all your middle school friends who once spent half an hour trying to figure out what shade of grey to match with what shade of pink. Oh no, what a tragedy, you have (*gasp*) too many options! You choose the following: pink, pink but with circles, slightly less pink purple, slightly more purple purple, slightly more blue purple, and blue with nice squares on it. You stare at your collection of origami paper. Firstly, you did some math, and you have come to the conclusion that in order for each group of 5 in your deformed dodecahedron to be a different combination, you need 6 colours. Step 2: Spend an hour trying to figure out what colours to choose. You do it anyway because you like to torture yourself. You’re hesitant to do this, because the last time you made something with those, you had to tape it (of course you have no glue, you’re not a two-year-old), which is technically cheating and morally wrong. Most of them are boring sonobe unit structures (sonobe units are generally the first units people tend to learn, since they are “the easiest” to make and assemble), but the “little turtle” ones catch your eye. Origami Modular Sonobe Cube Step 8: You've completed 4 sides of the cube already.Step 1: Google. Origami Modular Sonobe Cube Step 7: Add a green unit at the top and insert the tips of the purple units into the green unit. Origami Modular Sonobe Cube Step 6: Flip the entire assembly over. Origami Modular Sonobe Cube Step 5: Add a purple unit to the right side of the green unit. Insert the tip of the purple unit into the green unit. A cube has 6 sides so if you make 2 units of one color, the opposite sides of the cube will be of the same color. Origami Modular Sonobe Cube Step 3: Repeat Steps 1 and 2 and make a total of 6 units. Origami Modular Sonobe Cube Step 2: Flip paper over. You should have the following to start with. ![]() Origami Modular Sonobe Cube Step 1: Start by folding a modular Sonobe unit. Made this origami? Comment and Submit your photo using the comment box at the end of this page! ![]()
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