Origami Dodecahedron

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Origami Dodecahedron designed by Jo Nakashima (05/2021)
Difficulty level: low intermediate
Paper: 7.5cm x 7.5cm origami paper (30 sheets)

In this video you’ll learn how to make an origami dodecahedron, a polyhedron with twelve flat faces. This is a regular dodecahedron, so each face is a regular pentagon. You can make it fully colored or with color change on the edges, depending on which side of the unit you use.

This is my last platonic solid. Learn how to make all the other ones: cube, tetrahedron, octahedron and icosahedron.

Paper

This is a modular origami and you’ll need 30 square sheets of paper. Standard origami paper works well and I recommend small sizes like 7.5cm x 7.5cm square (the finished model will be about 6.5cm tall). Everything is well connected without glue.

Support my work!

If you like my work, please consider visiting and subscribing to my YouTube channel! You’ll find all my work, including models that are not in this website and also models from other origami artists. The easiest way to support my work is simply watching my videos, clicking the like button, leaving comments and subscribing to my channel!

You can also contribute with small donations on Patreon or YouTube Channel Membership. It’s basically like paying me a tip as a thanks for my work and get some rewards in return, like early access to my tutorials and your name in the video (the “thank you” list). They work with recurring payments, but you can cancel anytime so one-time donations are also possible.

Origami Monkey

Learn how to make an origami monkey.
Designed by Jo Nakashima (25/Feb/2016).

I came up with this model after creating the origami Mr. Heart because some of the intermediary steps resemble a monkey face.

In this video I’m using 15cm x 15cm Kraft paper. Standard origami paper works as well. I don’t recommend thick paper for this model.

Origami Monkey Diagrams

Notice: at first I’ve made these diagrams only for the video, not to be published separately. For this reason, some transitions or steps might not be so clear. If you find some step difficult, you can find more detailed instructions in the video tutorial.

Support my work!

If you like my work, please consider visiting and subscribing to my YouTube channel! You’ll find all my work, including models that are not in this website and also models from other origami artists. The easiest way to support my work is simply watching my videos, clicking the like button, leaving comments and subscribing to my channel!

You can also contribute with small donations on Patreon or YouTube Channel Membership. It’s basically like paying me a tip as a thanks for my work and get some rewards in return, like early access to my tutorials and your name in the video (the “thank you” list). They work with recurring payments, but you can cancel anytime so one-time donations are also possible.

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