A Rose for Irene Origami Diagram
Download Article
Download Article
Folding a rose is an intermediate origami project that results in a beautiful, decorative flower. It all starts with a simple square that's carefully folded into a spiral pattern. The rose comes together as four petals tightly twisted around a square base. Once you make your first rose, you'll want to make several more so you can create an entire bouquet of these pretty paper flowers. Become an absolute expert. Take our wikiHow Origami Course!
-
1
Get a square piece of paper. This paper rose starts with a simple square, as most origami projects do. Choose any color you'd like, so long as the two sides are different in color or texture.[1] Glossy paper makes for the most realistic-looking rose.
-
2
Fold the paper in half (Start with the colored side down, white side up). Bring the bottom edge of the paper up to meet the top edge. Crease the fold with your fingers, working from the center outwards.
- In the origami world, this is known as a "valley fold," because it creates a little valley in the paper Almost every origami project begins with a valley fold or its opposite, the mountain fold, which creates a ridge.[2]
Advertisement
-
3
Unfold the paper. When you open the fold, you'll see the crease you've made running right through the middle of the paper, creating a horizontal line.
- Orient the crease horizontally, with the red side down.
-
4
Fold the bottom half in half. Line up the bottom edge of the paper to meet the horizontal crease in the middle. [3]
- Crease the new fold with your fingers.
-
5
Fold the top half in half. Bring the top edge of the paper to meet the lower horizontal crease.[4]
- Crease the new fold with your finger.
-
6
Unfold the paper. Now there are three horizontal creases in the paper making four equal sections.[5]
-
7
Fold the bottom in three-quarters. Make sure your paper is oriented so that the three creases you created in the previous step are horizontal, with the red side down. Take the bottom edge of the paper (The side closest to your body) and drag it up across the surface of the paper until it meets the crease that is closest to the top. The crease you are trying to get the bottom edge to meet with is located one fourth of the way down the paper from the top.[6]
- Crease the new fold with your fingers or a bone folder.
- If you've done the fold correctly, the area between the crease in the middle of the paper and the crease three-fourths of the way down the paper has been split in half with your new fold.
- You can unfold the crease you just made to make sure you did it right. However, make sure to fold it back into place before moving on to the next step.
-
8
Fold the bottom-right corner in. Take hold of the bottom-right corner (as made by the bottom crease) and make a small diagonal fold at a 45 degree angle. The corner should fold upward so that a small portion of the right edge of the paper aligns with nearest crease.[7]
-
9
Unfold the paper. You should see four horizontal creases. Of your four original areas, the one second from the bottom should be divided in half by one of these horizontal creases. Additionally, in this same area, you should see two small diagonal creases on the right side.[8]
- Of these two diagonal creases, one should be going up at a 45 degree angle from the horizontal crease, and the other down at the same angle.
-
10
Mark the creases. Using a pen or pencil, draw lines along your creases.[9]
-
11
Rotate the paper 180 degrees and repeat. Turn the paper so that the top becomes the bottom. Then, repeat steps 7 through 10.[10]
-
12
Rotate the paper 90 degrees and repeat. Turn the paper one quarter of a turn, then repeat steps 2 through 10.[11]
-
13
Rotate 180 degrees and repeat. Turn the paper another half-turn, then repeat steps 7 through 10.[12]
Advertisement
-
1
Fold the paper in half diagonally. With the red side still down, take the lower right corner and bring it to meet the upper left corner. Crease the fold with your finger.[13]
-
2
Unfold the paper. Open it up to reveal a new diagonal crease.[14]
-
3
Fold the paper on the opposite diagonal. Rotate the paper 90 degrees and repeat the previous two steps.[15]
-
4
Unfold the paper. Open it up to reveal two diagonal creases that form an "X" through the paper.[16]
-
5
Fold the top-left corner. In each corner of your paper, you should now see a small square that is divided by a single diagonal crease. Take hold of the top left corner and fold it inward, creating a crease that is perpendicular to the original diagonal crease.[17]
- The corner of your paper should align with the bottom-right corner of the small square.
-
6
Unfold and mark all the new creases formed. You should now see a small "X" in the top left corner. Draw a line along the new crease.[18]
-
7
Fold the bottom-right corner up to the new line. Take the bottom-right corner and bring it up so that the point of the corner just touches the new line you drew in the previous step.[19]
- This should create a new crease that runs parallel to one of the lines making up the big "X," specifically the one running from bottom-left to top-right.
-
8
Unfold and mark. Unfold and draw a line along the new diagonal crease.[20]
-
9
Rotate and repeat. Turn the paper 180 degrees and repeat the previous four steps.[21]
- You should now see three lines running parallel from the bottom-left corner of your paper up to the top right.
-
10
Rotate and repeat, again. Now turn the paper 90 degrees and repeat steps 5 through 9 (of Part 2).[22]
- When you are done, you should have three parallel lines running from bottom-left to top-right and three running from top-left to bottom-right.
Advertisement
-
1
Fold in the four corners. As in step 5 of Part two, fold in all four corners. You should not need to make any new creases to do this.[23]
- The end result will be an octagon.
-
2
Turn the paper over. The red side of your paper should now be face up.[24]
-
3
Locate the small triangle. Along the bottom edge of your paper, you should see a small creased triangle. It has a crease down the middle, making it look like two smaller triangles that share a vertical side.
- If you have trouble finding it, look for the triangle's right-most corner. The triangle's right-most corner is in the spot where the bottom edge of the paper, which is horizontal, meets the bottom-right edge of the paper, which is diagonal.
- If the small triangle isn't there, check to make sure you did step eight of part one correctly.
-
4
Make an inside reverse-fold in the bottom. If you don't know what an inside reverse-fold is or forget how to do an inside reverse-fold, follow the steps below[25]
- Fold the center crease of the triangle you located in the last step gently inward, creating a small valley fold.
- At the same time, fold the two diagonal sides of the triangle outward to create small mountain folds.
- This should result in the small triangle creating a small "notch" on the side of the paper.
- Then, create one more mountain fold along the crease extending from the tip of the triangle.
- This is called an inside reverse-fold.[26]
-
5
Make another inside reverse-fold. In what was once the bottom left corner, you'll need to fold another notch of a slightly different shape.[27]
- Directly to the right of the small triangle (The one you just made an inside reverse fold with) is another crease. It runs parallel to the right side of the smaller triangle and is perpendicular to the side of the octagon.
- Push gently inward along this crease to create a valley fold.
- Then, as before, push the sides of the triangle gently outward, creating small ridges.
- Finally, create one more valley fold, pushing inward the nearest horizontal crease that runs parallel to the horizontal side of your new "notch."[28]
- This last crease should run out to just past the center of your paper, creating one side of the small square in the center that you can see marked out on the reverse side.
-
6
Rotate and repeat. Turn the paper 90 degrees and repeat Steps 3 and 4. Do this for the 3 remaining sides.[29] [30]
Advertisement
-
1
Use the valley fold on each petal's edge. Now that the basic structure of your rose is in place, it's time to start working on the petals. As your first step, you'll need to add a valley fold the outside edge of each one.[31]
- You'll see that, if you look a your rose from above, it has four long valleys extending out from a square in the center. On the right side of each of these is a large, flat surface. Grasp the edge of this surface and fold it inward.
- Specifically, grab the three sides of the outside edge and fold them in such that a small tab shaped like a trapezoid is formed.[32]
-
2
Fold in the corners. Looking at your rose from the side, you should now see that you have four shapes that look like triangles with one corner chopped off (along the area you just valley-folded). Protruding from the base of each of these you should see a small triangle of the white side of your paper. Fold in the right-side point of each of these "chopped-off" triangles.[33]
- Draw an imaginary line straight up from the bottom point of the "white" triangle, and make a valley fold along it.[34]
-
3
Unfold the corners and reverse fold them. Unfold the valley folds you just made to the tips. Then, reverse fold them such that each tip disappears inside the rose.[35]
- If you've done this correctly, the white triangles should no longer be visible.
-
4
Add tiny valley folds. Your "chopped off" triangles should now look like they have two points chopped off: one on the left and a tiny one on the right, created by your reverse folds. You'll now fold up the tiny "chopped" side at a 45 degree angle from the base of the "chopped" triangle (i.e. the edge of the paper).[36]
-
5
Unfold and reverse fold. Unfold the valley folds you just made, and then reverse fold along the same lines, folding the tiny triangle you created in the previous step inside the rose at all four points.[37]
-
6
Fold down the edges. Your "chopped off" triangle should now have reverse folds at each "chopped" edge. These will allow you to make a small valley fold, horizontal to the base of each triangle, folding the resulting tab outward. Do this to all four petals.[38]
-
7
Create legs. Bring the petals together to create "legs." For each set of petals, pull them close together such that the right-side one sits just behind the left-side one. Press down on the creases to hold them in place. The result should be four pointed and fairly sturdy legs.[39]
- If you've done this right, you should be able to see little or no white-side surface on the legs when looking at your rose from the side.
-
8
Turn it over and fold the legs in. Turn your rose over such that you are looking down into the white interior. Then, one by one, fold down each of the triangular legs.[40]
- Insert the ends into one another such that you close off the opening of the rose.[41]
-
9
Turn the rose over. The square that you are looking down on will become the top of the rose.[42]
-
10
Push in the quadrants. The square on top of your rose should be divided into four quadrants by creases. With your finger, gently push in each quadrant, leaving in place the ridges that form an "X" over the top of the square.[43]
-
11
Rotate. Place a finger into each of the four quadrants around the "X" and gently rotate.[44]
- This should give the top of rose a more swirled, organic feel, as opposed to the hard lines of the "X."
-
12
Make a swirl. With a pair of tweezers, grab the center of what was once the "X," and slowly but firmly continue to rotate, being careful not to tear the paper.[45]
- As you do this, the center of the rose will sink inside, creating a more realistic look.
- This may take several tries to get right.
-
13
Curl the petals. Using two fingers, take each petal by the point and roll it toward the center, then release. This will create nicely curled petals.[46]
Advertisement
-
1
Get a new piece of paper. If you want to add an origami stem, start with a fresh piece of paper, preferable green.
-
2
Start with the white side up and fold it in half. Valley fold the paper, from corner to corner, creating two triangles, then unfold.[47]
-
3
Fold the corners in. Create two more valley folds, folding the left and right corners in toward the center crease, creating a kite shape.[48]
-
4
Repeat. Fold the corners in again toward the center crease. Then do it one more time. You should now have a very skinny kite shape.[49]
-
5
Turn it over and fold upward. Flip your stem over so that the edges of the paper all face hidden, then fold the bottom point up to the top one.[50]
-
6
Fold it in half. Now, fold the stem in half along the vertical axis.[51]
-
7
Fold down the sides, then reverse fold. Fold the outer part (which will become the leaf) of the paper outward, away from the inside (stem), creating two diagonal creases. Then, reverse fold the leaf out and away from the stem. It will have crease in the center.[52]
-
8
Attach the stem. Put the pointed end of the stem through the small hole in the underside of your rose where the "legs" all meet.
Advertisement
Add New Question
-
Question
What is the meaning of the color of the roses?
Red = Love and romance. Dark pink = Used when thanking someone. Pink = Happiness. Light Pink = Color of rose given to someone to show sympathy. White = Innocence and purity. Lavender = Someone has 'cast you under their spell' (or falling in love, in other words). Orange = Desire. Blue = Rarity. A mixture of red and white = Unity.
-
Question
Do we have to make a stem?
Part 5 of this guide explicitly states that making a stem for your rose is optional.
-
Question
What kind of paper should I use?
Any paper is fine, but construction and manila paper are not recommended as they are difficult to be exact when folding.
-
Question
Can I make a rose with printer paper?
As long as the paper is square, then you can use these same steps with printer paper. (You may have to cut the printer paper into an even square.)
-
Question
How big should the paper be?
Any size. In origami, the size of the paper does not matter. You can make the same model in small and large versions.
-
Question
Why does the paper need to have two different sides?
It doesn't really have to, it just makes it easier to keep track of which side you're currently on and whether you're folding in the right direction.
-
Question
Why does this take two pieces of paper?
One is for the rose blossom, the other is for the stem. You insert the stem into the small hole in the bottom of the rose blossom.
-
Question
Does it have to be perfect?
No, it doesn't have to be perfect. Just try your best. If you're not happy with the way it turns out, keep trying. Something like this takes practice.
-
Question
What should I do if I don't have origami paper?
You can buy sets with origami paper, or you can take an A4 piece of paper and take one corner and fold it so it's in line with the other side. After that you just need to cut the extra bit off so that you have a square piece.
-
Question
Do I have to use white and red paper?
No. You can use any color you like. Keep in mind different colors can mean different things to people.
Show more answers
Ask a Question
200 characters left
Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered.
Submit
Advertisement
-
Make sure your folds are sharp and precise. Line edges up carefully before making the crease.
-
Your folds need to be straight as possible or it will not turn out right.
-
You can also make a stem from green pipe cleaners or wire, if you don't want to make one using origami.
-
You don't have to use colored paper, but it will make your rose look much better. By using two different colors, it will make it easier to keep track of where you are at in the process.
-
At the end, just before rolling the petals, if you fold the 4 pointed tips inward it looks much more realistic.
Thanks for submitting a tip for review!
Advertisement
About This Article
Article SummaryX
To fold a paper rose, use a square piece of paper and make the base folds, then unfold each base fold to create creases. Next, use a straight edge and pencil to mark each crease you made. Then, make the diagonal folds, unfold them, and mark those creases. Use your marked guidelines to fold the paper until you have the basic structure, then move on to the intricate final folds to create the rose petals! To learn about the specific folds you need to make, read on!
Did this summary help you?
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 3,444,004 times.
Did this article help you?
A Rose for Irene Origami Diagram
Source: https://www.wikihow.com/Fold-a-Paper-Rose
0 Response to "A Rose for Irene Origami Diagram"
Post a Comment