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How to make a five-petals standard origami rose paper flower

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five-petals spiral origami rose  paper flower

 

 

Level Intermediate
Copyright Hyo Ahn

This page is for those who want the instructions to fold a five-petals standard rose flower

If you have not folded the four-petal version of standard rose, it is recommended to learn it before working on this rose since it is easier to learn the basic techniques with the four-petals one.

 

If you find any bugs on this instruction, please send an email to HyoAhn's email.

 

You may use any kind of paper to fold the standard rose flower (*it is easier if the front and the back side of the paper are slightly different whether it be in texture or color)

Make sure the paper that you use is a square (all sides are equal and all the angles equal 90 degrees). Here I used 20cm x 20cm square paper.

Five-petals standard origami rose paper flower: front side of paper

00A.

This is the front side of the paper.

 

The shinier one is on the front.

Five-petals standard origami rose paper flower: back side of paper

00B.

This is the back side of the paper.

Five-petals standard origami rose paper flower

00C.

You can convert the square into a pentagon.

 

There is an instruction to teach how to make a regular pentagon out of a square paper.

 

You can easily get a regular pentagon from the instruction.

 

This is the front side of the regular pentagon.

Five-petals standard origami rose paper flower

00D.

This is the back side of the paper.

 

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Rose Pogonias



A SATURATED meadow,
Sun-shaped and jewel-small,
A circle scarcely wider
Than the trees around were tall;
Where winds were quite excluded,
And the air was stifling sweet
With the breath of many flowers, --
A temple of the hear.

There we bowed us in the burning,
As the sun's right worship is,
To pick where none could miss them
A thousand orchises;
For though the grass was scattered,
yet every second spear
Seemed tipped with wings of color,
That tinged the atmosphere.

We raised a simple prayer
Before we left the spot,
That in the general mowing
That place might be forgot;
Or if not all so favored,
Obtain such grace of hours,
that none should mow the grass there
While so confused with flowers.


Poem by Obert Frost