Oh wow - this brought back memories! We lived in Japan when I was in grade school, and our maid taught me how to make these (and all kinds of other origami figures). I should take it up again and see what my fingers remember...
(Typing the phrase "our maid" felt really weird, btw. Every officer's family back then had a live-in maid to help with child-care and cleaning. Ahhh, the 1950s...)
HALO Effect Originally shared by Noah Friedman This is how automation is probably going to kill us all: tell a computer to optimize for something and it will. (This observation is just a variation on the nanotech grey goo problem.)
The Service Economy I've also been there, done that, only with much less fear for my life. via Meep https://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_5c0ea571e4b06484c9fd4c21?ec_carp
Will be trying this.
ReplyDeleteTook me three tries to get one that didn't blow up, but I'm using cheap construction paper, 1/2" x 18" strips...
ReplyDeleteOh wow - this brought back memories! We lived in Japan when I was in grade school, and our maid taught me how to make these (and all kinds of other origami figures). I should take it up again and see what my fingers remember...
ReplyDelete(Typing the phrase "our maid" felt really weird, btw. Every officer's family back then had a live-in maid to help with child-care and cleaning. Ahhh, the 1950s...)
ReplyDeleteAlthough, "our cleaning service" is not an unusual thing to talk about these days, Pat Kight
ReplyDeleteI'm guessing most cleaning services don't entertain the kids by teaching origami. :)
ReplyDeleteALAS!
ReplyDelete