Origami Polyhedra Design
Origami Polyhedra Design is a book on origami designs for constructing polyhedra. It was written by the origami artist and mathematician John Montroll, and it was published in 2009 by A K Peters.
Topics
There are two traditional methods for making polyhedra out of paper: polyhedral nets and modular origami. In the net method, the faces of the polyhedron are placed to form an irregular shape on a flat sheet of paper, with some of these faces connected to each other within this shape; it is cut out and folded into the shape of the polyhedron, and the remaining pairs of faces are attached together. In the modular origami method, many similarly-shaped "modules" are each folded from a single sheet of origami paper, and then assembled to form a polyhedron, with pairs of modules connected by the insertion of a flap from one module into a slot in another module. This book does neither of those two things. Instead, it provides designs for folding polyhedra, each out of a single uncut sheet of origami paper.After a brief introduction to the mathematics of polyhedra and the concepts used to design origami polyhedra, book presents designs for folding 72 different shapes, organized by their level of difficulty. These include the regular polygons and the Platonic solids, Archimedean solids, and Catalan solids, as well as less-symmetric convex polyhedra such as dipyramids and non-convex shapes such as a "sunken octahedron". An important constraint used in the designs was that the visible faces of each polyhedron should have few or no creases; additionally, the symmetries of the polyhedron should be reflected in the folding pattern, to the extent possible, and the resulting polyhedron should be large and stable.