I have also seen science experiments where water was boiled in a
waterbomb (bunsen burner, gauze mat) - the water stops the paper from
burning - quite surprising
I, on the other hand taught my kids to make them as a fun activity on
a hot afternoon, with a cool watery payoff - they throw full of
On Jun 13, 2015, at 6:04 PM, Anne LaVin anne.la...@gmail.com wrote:
PS: I also always wondered why that name, where it originated.
I thought it was called a water bomb base because it is the base you use for
the water bomb model/blown up cube, which one can actually fill with water and
On 14/06/15 04.54, cafe...@pacific.net wrote:
65 years ago, when I first learned origami in first grade at Whittier
Elementary School in Berkeley California, water bombs were literally
water bombs.
We folded them, blew them up, filled them with water (not always
totally successfully) and
(Forwarding a reply for Yahoo user Laura sea4...@yahoo.com, please reply
to the list or to her, not to me!):
On Thu, Jun 11, 2015 at 8:10 PM, Gerardo @neorigami.com
gera...@neorigami.com wrote:
So in a nutshell, where does the waterbomb name come from, in the case of
the traditional origami
65 years ago, when I first learned origami in first grade at Whittier
Elementary School in Berkeley California, water bombs were literally
water bombs.
We folded them, blew them up, filled them with water (not always totally
successfully) and threw them.
Messy, wet and really fun.
Louise