Origami Ryujin 3.5 Tutorial

Once the entire crease pattern is successfully collapsed, you will be left with a blocky, rigid, accordion-like dragon. The final phase turns this geometric structure into a lifelike sculpture.

If you’d like me to focus on a specific part, such as "How to make the scale collapse" or "How to fold the Ryujin 3.5 head," let me know! origami ryujin 3.5 tutorial

The head requires high-density paper manipulation to form the jaw, tongue, eyes, and sweeping horns. Once the entire crease pattern is successfully collapsed,

Folding the , designed by Satoshi Kamiya , is widely considered one of the most difficult challenges in origami. Because of its extreme complexity—often requiring hundreds of hours—there is no single "short" tutorial; instead, it is taught through extensive multi-part video series. Core Tutorial Components The head requires high-density paper manipulation to form

Core pre-folds (recommended)

Search for "Ryujin 3.5 Help Thread." Be warned: The pros are harsh. Post a photo of your grid, and they will tell you exactly where your scales are off by half a square.

The Ryujin’s head is asymmetrical. The jaw hinges differently than the horns. You will isolate a 10x10 grid section at the front. Here you will find the famous "Kamiya Horns" – two impossibly long, thin flaps that require you to reverse-fold the paper inside out through a hole the size of your thumbnail.