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Paper Shirt Greeting Card Folding Techniques

time2011/10/18

Use origami-folding techniques to create paper shirt greeting cards. Selecting the paper weight and paper texture creates a variety of shirt types, such as Hawaiian shirts. The weight determines the depth of the creases. Although heavier slitting line weight papers, such as card stock, present folding challenges, the origami enthusiast can crease the folds repeatedly until the surface appears flat. Handle lightweight sheets with care during folding and creasing to avoid unwanted tears or rips.
Origami
Choose patterned paper with tropical leaves and flowers in bold colors, ocean views or sunsets to create an Hawaiian-inspired paper shirt slitting line greeting card. Although most origami folds start with square-shaped paper, this shirt folding technique requires a rectangle shape, folding the paper vertically in half. The centerfold crease line acts as the guideline for the remaining folding sequence. With this folding method, the sleeve folds on one end and the collar folds on the opposite end. The folded sleeves are inserted under the collar shaped points hiding written greetings.
Iris-Folding
Handmade cutout cards also include techniques, such as iris-folding. According to the Origami-Resource-Center, "In iris folding, strips of paper are layered upon each other to give a pattern similar to the iris of a camera." Although paper artists often find this method controversial to traditional paper-folding techniques, such as origami, the layering creates the look of a folded pattern. This method layers paper strips within a template such as a triangle or square. Cut out a shirt pattern on separate card stock and cut complementary color paper strips in varying widths and lengths. As you layer the strips within the selected template, position each strip to create a center eye. Use repositionable tape or glue sticks to hold the strips in place. When you turn over slitting line the cut out shirt, the iris fold appears within the body of the card.