11/03/2025
🌸 How to Make a Kusudama Flower – Beautiful & Easy Paper Folding!
Want to create a stunning Kusudama flower using just a few sheets of paper? 🌺✨ This easy step-by-step tutorial will show you how to fold a gorgeous 3D origami flower—perfect for home decor, gifts, and fun DIY projects!
📌 What You’ll Need:
✅ 5 square sheets of paper 📜
✅ Glue for assembling the petals 🧴
📌 In this tutorial, you’ll learn:
✔ How to fold a Kusudama flower petal step by step 🌼
✔ How to assemble and shape a 3D Kusudama flower 💐
✔ Creative ways to use paper flowers for gifts & decorations 🎁
✨ Why You’ll Love This Tutorial:
✔ Beginner-friendly & super easy – Great for all ages! 🎨
✔ A perfect handmade craft for gifts, cards & home decor 🏡
✔ Great for weddings, birthdays & festive decorations 🎉
📩 Follow for more fun origami & DIY crafts!
💬 Comment below: What flower should we fold next?
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📌Keywords-
Kusudama Flower
How to Make a Kusudama Flower
3D Origami Flower
DIY Kusudama Flower
Paper Folding Kusudama
Kusudama Paper Flower Tutorial
Handmade Kusudama Flower
Kusudama Flower Decoration
Simple Kusudama Origami
Kusudama Flower Step by Step
Easy Origami for Beginners
DIY Paper Crafts
Handmade Paper Flowers
Creative Paper Art
Paper Flower for Decoration
DIY Wedding Decorations
Quick & Easy Paper Crafts
Origami Flowers for Gifts
3D Paper Folding Projects
DIY Home Decor Ideas
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📜 What is Origami
origami, art of folding objects out of paper to create both two-dimensional and three-dimensional subjects. The word origami (from Japanese oru [“to fold”] and kami [“paper”]) has become the generic description of this art form, although some European historians feel it places undue weight on the Japanese origins of an art that may well have developed independently around the world.
🎯 9 Styles of Origami
Origami, like other art forms, has many styles. The more common ones include:
1. Realistic: Creations that exhibit the main features of the subject, often resulting in complex designs with many steps.
2. Minimal: Creations that capture the essence of the subject with minimal folds and with an emphasis on simplicity.
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3. Modular: Multiple geometric "units" made from multiple sheets of paper whose flaps and pockets tuck into each other to form polygons or polyhedra. Typically, all sheets are folded in the same way or in a small number of ways.
4. Composite: As with modular origami, multiple sheets of paper are used, but in this style each sheet is folded differently to realize a different part of the subject. Composite origami was one of the most common styles in the 1950s and ’60s but is relatively uncommon today.
5. Practical: Models that have a real-life application, such as for use as envelopes, boxes, cups, dishes, etc.
6. Pureland: A concept suggested by John Smith of England, who proposed a composition system using only square paper and “mountain” and “valley” folds, resulting in models that are easy to duplicate.
7. Tessellations: A geometric folding technique in which the image is created by the pattern of folded edges across the paper. Tessellations are often periodic (repeating) and may be flat or three-dimensional, and many of them exhibit further structure when held up to the light. Not surprisingly, many of the leading practitioners of this technique have been mathematicians.
8. Wet folding: A technique invented by Akira Yoshizawa in which the paper contains a water-soluble glue (known as sizing) and is dampened slightly before folding. The dampness permits the paper to be folded into soft curves, which then harden in durability as the paper dries.
9. Crumpled: A technique created by Paul Jackson and developed by Vincent Floderer that involves the crumpling of the paper before folding. This technique can produce highly realistic organic forms.