Skip to Main Content

Origami Ryujin - 3.5 Tutorial

An overview of the library and research resources available to students in the Vet Tech program.

Origami Ryujin - 3.5 Tutorial

If you get frustrated, take a break. A mistake made in anger is hard to fix. Conclusion

This is not a beginner's tutorial. It is a test of patience, precision, and perseverance.

Take photos at the end of every folding session. If you make a mistake, you can trace your steps backward to find exactly where your grid alignment drifted.

Gently twist and curve the spine into a dynamic, serpentine pose.

Shift your folding strategy to divide those segments into thirds, eventually landing on the exact origami ryujin 3.5 tutorial

The paper must be incredibly thin yet strong enough to withstand heavy reverse folding. Essential Tools Bone Folder / Creasing Tool: For flattening dense layers. Line Gauge / Long Ruler: For precise grid scoring.

– wet-shaping recommended for realism

Preliminary grid and waterbomb/box pleat framework

Pull the paper layers outward to form the four legs. This requires meticulous inside-reverse folds and sinks to ensure the claws have the correct number of digits. Phase 4: The Head Reconstruction If you get frustrated, take a break

You cannot fold this model from standard kami (standard origami paper). It is too small and not durable enough. You have two primary paths:

The Ryujin is a design that has evolved over years. Version 3.5 is the most famous iteration, striking a balance between the earlier 3.0 and the impossibly complex 4.0.

Warning: If your fingers don't hurt and your vision isn't blurry after the grid, you missed a crease.

Because looking at a flat CP can be discouraging, the global origami community has broken the folding process down into sequential video modules. The most legendary and universally recommended video guide was created by expert folder on YouTube. It is a test of patience, precision, and perseverance

Base and reference

Located at one corner of the paper. It uses a high concentration of asymmetrical creases to form the jaw, eyes, and horns.

Final detailing