* fold the paper in half

* reverse the fold

* fold each section in half, to the center (like this: VV)

* reverse each new fold

* fold each new section in half again (like this: VVVV)

* reverse each new fold

* repeat, repeat, repeat until finished

Typically I will do one direction until 1/8ths, then the others, just because the paper will deform if you fold all of 1/32 or 1/64 in one direction and not any others. It’s good to spread the folding around, so I’ll usually fold to 1/8, all the other directions, then continue to 1/16, then the same for the other directions, then to 1/32 etc.

Reversing the folds is important, as it gives a neutral fold orientation to each crease, and makes it infinitely easier to collapse the model later when doing the final folding. You certainly don’t have to do this, but not doing it often leads to big headaches, and it’s something I really recommend to do. It’s more important also with stronger paper which retains more “fold memory” and crease orientation; if you’re using flimsy cheap origami paper, then it’s not as important because too much folding will destroy your paper. (to put it in context, a strong sheet of washi can withstand thousands of back-and-forth foldings and creasings along the same line before it starts to separate, whereas a wood-pulp sheet of origami paper will only last about 4 times when I fold it…)

Also, doing the “dividing in half” routine rather than accordion-folding, zig zagging, fold-overs, etc is good, because the dividing routine reduces errors in your folding by dividing them into lesser errors, whereas the other folding methods magnify the errors with each continued fold- so your edge creases will really look horrible, things won’t match up, and so on. Mathematically speaking it’s much, much better to divide the paper as you go along. I stress this in all my classes as I feel it’s quite important.

I am a slow folder, so I don’t make grids very quickly; a 1m x 70cm sheet of elephant hide takes me several hours to get to a 32-division triangular grid. dividing that further into 64 takes the same amount of time again, as it’s the same number of creases to be made! bear that in mind, the step between 32 and 64 is a doubling 🙂 I always seem to forget this fact.

To fold a small sheet of paper though, like an A4 sheet (or american letter size paper) into 32 triangular divisions… I think probably an hour? I don’t really measure time while folding, I try to sort of trance out and get into the rhythm of folding and not think about anything. I find it very enjoyable this way.

Recently I had to fold a lot of grids, making a big piece- I divided 42 one meter sheets into squares about 1cm in size. it took me literally a month to do this, and my hands hated it! many thousands of pleats. I find that I like to work at larger scales, as they are more interesting visually; I can’t really fold pleats any smaller than about 5mm in size, below that the paper just turns to mush. I prefer to fold paper when it’s got some springiness left in it, don’t you? So I prefer to have pleats about 1cm or so, given a choice. This requires larger paper but as stated above I prefer this anyway. I used to fold on the bus, and that required working with 15cm/6inch paper, and that was fine for starting out but very very limiting as time went on. Help yourself out and use bigger paper, it will save you a lot of frustration!

linked below are two videos of me pre-creasing a square grid and a triangular grid, if you’d like to see the technique I use (bear in mind these are thicker papers, so they required a lot more force than is normally needed.)

Hopefully there’s some information in here that you will find useful or at least informative! Best of luck and happy folding!