Disney And Pop Culture Origami Is Too Cute Not To Gush Over
This is also incredibly creative!
Elana
- Published in Disney
Louise Cassidy has been creating pop culture inspired origami for over six years. Origami is the Japanese art of folding paper into decorative shapes and figures and it has existed since the 17th century in Japan.
Origami became a popular form of art in a global sense in the early 1900's and Cassidy's corner of the creative creations is certainly endearing and unique. Cassidy sees potential everywhere in pop culture, she said:
"Whenever I see a popular character in a film or TV show, instead of concentrating on the plotline, my mind wanders into how I could recreate it with paper folding."
1. Up!
foldiloxs2. Ariel & Ursula
foldiloxs3. Jack Skellington
foldiloxs"The hardest part is making the character identifiable, each origami paper model is only an inch tall, so making sure they have the right detail is important." - Louise
4. Mad Hatter
foldiloxs5. Tinkerbell
foldiloxs6. Mary Poppins
foldiloxs7. Alice And The White Rabbit
foldiloxs"Making unique artworks can take anything from 30 minutes to a couple of hours." - Louise
8. Snow White
foldiloxs9. Tiger King
foldiloxs10. The Mandalorian & Grogu
foldiloxs11. Queen Elinor and Merida
foldiloxs12. The Evil Queen
foldiloxs"By using various paper art techniques such as origami, crumpling to create a tree bark texture for Baby Groot, or paper cutting tiny feather wings for Maleficent, I set about recreating these famous characters." - Louise