[Origami] Quentin Trollip's email address

2018-09-12 Thread Jorge E. Jaramillo
Hi

If Quentin is on this list please contact me off list, if not could someone
please reply to me privately and share his email address with me?

Thanks.

-- 
Jorge Jaramillo


Re: [Origami] math to study origami

2018-09-12 Thread Robert Lang
Thus spake "Origami on behalf of Matthew Gardiner" 
 on 
9/12/18, 4:58 AM:


My question is, ..., and could anyone give me some keywords or hints for 
the type of math I should be looking at?

There is some discussion of recommended math courses here:

https://origamiusa.org/thefold/article/careers-origami

Enjoy (and good luck!),

Robert
 




[Origami] math to study origami

2018-09-12 Thread Matthew Gardiner
wow, I recently arrived back from 7OSME. What an enriching and enlightening 
experience. So wonderful to see such incredible work from the growing network 
of origami related research. Many presentations featured math, and lots of it. 
Perhaps the best lecture of the program (related to my query) was Tom Hull’s 
lecture on self-foldability. Not only was the topic super intriguing, but he 
did an amazing job of explaining the math, it was also super funny! It made me 
realise that the math was accessible, and not too esoteric. It also made me 
realise that I’d like to study math to translate my intuitions of origami into 
communicable ideas and software. I continued math all the way through high 
school and would have done more had I followed architecture, however I went to 
art school and learned how to further my intuitive skills instead.

Now I realise that math is a huge field, so I’m looking to tailor my study 
towards what I’ll need for origami, particularly kinetic origami, rigidity 
theory etc. I’m wanting to translate the ideas into software, or work with a 
software engineer and translate the ideas to them.

My question is, has anyone been through a similar experience of learning, and 
could anyone give me some keywords or hints for the type of math I should be 
looking at?

cheers, and all the best, Matthew