Create a 5-pointed star from a single square of paper, often starting with a pentagon base.
The paper folded itself into a precise pentagon using the simple origami trick of folding, marking, and cutting, transforming from four sides to five. ШЄШЩ…ЩЉЩ„ Pentagonal star rar
Once upon a time, a humble square piece of paper felt boring. It wanted to become something magical—a symbol of light, a . Create a 5-pointed star from a single square
The lines continued until a perfect pentagram (five-pointed star) was inscribed inside the pentagon, satisfying the golden ratio of geometry. It wanted to become something magical—a symbol of light, a
The paper wasn't finished. It wanted to be three-dimensional. Using techniques from Seyed Masoud Hosseini's or Thomas Hull's tutorials, it locked its own edges together without any glue, creating a solid, interlocking pentagonal star that could spin or adorn a tree.