KeepItTidyZA t1_ix063pl wrote
Reply to comment by H3ISEN in Origami titan beetle, designed by Shuki Kato and folded by me, folded from one uncut 50cm square of paper, 2022. by H3ISEN
are you sure your GSM is correct? I buy paper for a printing company and the thinnest we use is 48 gram and it's nearly transparent and tears very easily. I can't imagine a paper 5 times thinner.
ontopofyourmom t1_ix0baqs wrote
Purpose-designed small-batch Japanese paper made for hand-folding, not machine-printing?
It's fundamentally different than anything your company buys.
00PublicAcct t1_ix0wuao wrote
If they indeed used Alios Kraft, it's a French product and is machine-made. But I can't find Alios Kraft lighter than 30gsm
KeepItTidyZA t1_ix0bqms wrote
okay cool! interesting. will look into it.
00PublicAcct t1_ix0wo71 wrote
There are specialty origami papers (or more commonly, specialty japanese or other asian printmaking papers adopted by origami artists) that are much thinner and tougher than commercially available ones. I do not know where they found 15gsm Kraft since the most common manufacturer used by origami artists, Gascogne Alios Kraft, only makes papers down to 30~ gsm. The lightest paper I've found online was 5~ gsm kozo (a japanese tissue paper) and the lightest I own is 12~ gsm kozo, but I haven't folded it yet. Two well known Western specialty origami paper manufacturers are Paper Circle which makes O-gami, and Origamido. For both, their lightest commercial papers are around 20 gsm but I think they'd try to make lighter ones for custom orders. both papers are incredibly durable and feel almost miraculous to fold if you're used to just crappy 6 inch kami/ "origami paper".
Note that density (weight/area) does not perfectly correlate with thickness but it's usually used as shorthand.
[deleted] t1_ix06a0q wrote
[removed]
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments