'Tom Hull' is featured as a movie character in the following productions:
Treasure of Ruby Hills (1955)
Actors:
James Alexander (actor),
Stanley Andrews (actor),
John L. Cason (actor),
Steve Darrell (actor),
Dick Foran (actor),
Charles Fredericks (actor),
Raymond Hatton (actor),
Gordon Jones (actor),
Barton MacLane (actor),
Zachary Scott (actor),
Glenn Strange (actor),
Rick Vallin (actor),
Lee Van Cleef (actor),
Lola Albright (actress),
Carole Mathews (actress),
Plot: Cattle ranchers "Chalk" Reynolds and Walt Payne have driven most of the small ranchers from the government range in the Ruby Hills country, and are fighting between them to get sole control. Reynold's chief gunman is Frank Emmett and Payne's hired gun is Jack Voyle, and both are described as ruthless killers. Into the valley rides Ross Haney who has just bought the water rights to the range, a legal step that Reynolds and Payne over-looked. Haney soon learns that a third faction is also out to control the valley; the Double V Ranch, owned by Robert Vernon and his sister Sherry. The latter falls in love with Haney, and is by his side when he is engaged in a showdown with all the other factions.
Keywords: 1870s, ambush, arizona, b-movie, b-western, barn, based-on-book, blackmail, brother-sister-relationship, cattleman
Genres:
Action,
Romance,
Western,
Taglines: THE GUNSKONED HILLS BECKONED TO MAN AND WOMAN...and took its shameful toll of both! One dazzling treasure!...One way to get it! A MAN HAD TO BE MAD...A WOMAN BOLD...to enter the Ruby Hills! The law guarded you to Silvertown...then handed back your guns!
Quotes:
[first lines]::Ross Haney: Ben should have been back hours ago. I hope he didn't have any trouble filing those papers.::Hull: Not as much trouble as we're going to have when we ride into Soledad.
Hull: Now that Ben's dead, you own all that land around Thousand Springs.::Ross Haney: Doesn't do you much good if you're six feet under it.
Garvey: Your friend is a relic of a wilder West. He walks among ghosts, the same as me.
Sherry Vernon: [to Ross] Now that you've looked me over, would you like to examine my teeth for age?
Walt Payne: You lookin' for a job? I need an extra hand out at the Box N.::Ross Haney: Cowhand or gunhand?::Walt Payne: We can use both in this valley.
Walt Payne: Join up with Reynolds, you'll be buckin' Jack Foyle. He's one of my men.::Ross Haney: Foyle the best you got?::Walt Payne: You want to face him?::Ross Haney: You can't face him. He always waits until your back is turned.
Scotty: Room?::Ross Haney: The best you got.::Scotty: Take your pick - there'll all bad.
Scotty: You know, I've only had three close friends in my day.::Ross Haney: Oh? Who were they?::Scotty: Two guns and a horse.
Scotty: Payne and Reynolds ran all the little ranchers off the range and they kept 'em off with lead. What do you plan to use for ammunition?::Ross Haney: Water.
Jack Voyle: I'll take care of Haney - for nothin'!::Frank Emmett: That's why you ain't a success. You work too cheap.
-
"Folding a New Tomorrow: Origami Meets Math and Science," Thomas Hull
Origami, the art of paper folding, has been practiced in Japan and all over the world for centuries. The past decade, however, has witnessed a surge of interest in using origami for science. Applications in robotics, airbag design, deployment of space structures, and even medicine and bioengineering are appearing in the popular science press. Videos of origami robots folding themselves up and walking away or performing tasks have gone viral in recent years. But if the art of paper folding is so old, why has there been an increase in origami applications now? One answer is because of mathematics. Advances in our understanding of how folding processes work has arisen due to success in modeling origami mathematically. In this presentation we will explore why origami lends itself to mathematic...
published: 13 Dec 2015
-
Five Intersecting Tetrahedra (Thomas Hull)
How to make the Five Intersecting Tetrahedra, designed by Thomas Hull
Presented here by Jo Nakashima with permission of the creator
Difficulty level: easy to make the modules, very hard to assembly
My paper: 9cm x 3cm each module (30 sheets)
Don't know the name of this paper in english, it is some kind of thick foil paper (cartolina laminada em português)
My old video with complete assembly:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aT2UHxA4uRY
How to fold thirds (if you have squares, you'll need to cut into thirds to get the starting rectangle):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbijRcl9PMI
Thomas Hull's home page and YouTube channel:
http://mars.wnec.edu/~th297133/
http://www.youtube.com/user/tomhull17
My Facebook page:
http://www.facebook.com/JoOrigami
http://kahuna.me...
published: 02 Aug 2011
-
Five Intersecting Tetrahedra Origami (Thomas Hull)
How to make five intersecting tetrahedra designed by Thomas Hull.
Presented here by Jo Nakashima with permission of the creator
Tom Hull's home page:
http://mars.wnec.edu/~th297133/
Each module has 5cm x 15cm. You'll need 6 modules for each tetrahedron (total of 5 x 6 = 30 modules). In this video I'm showing only how to make one tetrahedron, you'll need to build 5 all intersecting. In the link below you can find the diagram and some tips on joining the modules:
http://kahuna.merrimack.edu/~thull/fit.html
It really is a challenging puzzle to put it all together but it is also very fun! Good luck!
If you were not able (or don't wanna try) to intersect all tetrahedra, there is another video showing the complete assembly:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aT2UHxA4uRY
MY...
published: 18 Dec 2009
-
HULL CITY VS SHEFFIELD UNITED 5-3: Goals and highlights FA Cup Semi Final HD
Hull City edged an eight-goal thriller at Wembley to make it through to their first-ever FA Cup Final at the expense of League One Sheffield United.
Trailing 2-1 at the break, four second-half strikes from Matty Fryatt, Tom Huddlestone, Stephen Quinn and David Meyler completed a stirring comeback.
Nigel Clough's Blades had impressed and shocked in equal measure during their run to the last four, a run which had accounted for Aston Villa and Fulham in the earlier rounds.
They were aiming to become the first side from the third tier to reach The Cup Final since the formation of the Football League in 1888.
And they appeared on course to complete their historic mission when Jose Baxter and Stefan Scougall each steered home low crosses to cancel out Yannick Sagbo's first-half strike.
Bruc...
published: 14 Apr 2014
-
Origami ball from 120 PHiZZ units by Tom Hull
Hello!
This our origami ball from 120 PHiZZ units (pentagon-hexagon zig-zag unit). The first buckyball is made from 30 units. The second one is made from 120 units. You can make this big ones by making pentagons ànd hexagons.
Check out this cool channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4oFiqHQZuFCLDBqGN2y8uA
New video every thursday, tuesday and saturday!
Paper used in the video: regular origami paper 7,5x7,5cm
Enjoy!
published: 10 Jun 2014
-
Origami 5 Intersecting Tetrahedra Tetrahedron Tutorial designed by Thomas Hull (ASMR Paper Folding)
Subscribe and hit that bell icon to be notified when we upload!
5 Intersecting Tetrahedra is created by Thomas Hull.
In this tutorial I used 30 sheets of 5x15cm paper and a small piece of paper as a note. Glue is optional.
I used 5 different colours to make it easier to follow along.
Difficulty ★★★★★ / Advanced Origami
Timestamps:
0:11 - Step 1: Making a unit
2:14 - Step 2: Making a 3 piece unit
2:44 - Step 3: Making a tetrahedron
3:58 - Step 4: Assembling
Music:
"Little Idea" by www.bensound.com
published: 16 Jan 2019
-
"Wooden" Five Intersecting Tetrahedra (Thomas Hull) - Not a tutorial
Just showing another origami using the wood effect
Tutorial: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBcvoTm4MPc
Material:
- Copy paper (9cm x 3cm. 30 units)
- Décopatch Wood Effect (a tissue paper with the wood pattern)
http://www.origami-shop.com/fiche_article.php?ref=8&products;_id=1529&affiliate;_banner_id=1
Looks like it is not available at this moment... :(
- Glue (just to glue the décopatch to the copy paper)
Time spent: about 3 hours
Music:
Isolated
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons "Attribution 3.0"
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ .
========================================
Commercial use is not allowed without prior written permission from the author.
Please contact the author to ask for commercial licensing
==============...
published: 25 Aug 2011
-
stories from the Hull Blitz
A documentary about the bombing of Hull in World War Two, featuring eye witness accounts and narrative readings by Tom Courtenay.
published: 22 Mar 2018
-
"Folding a New Tomorrow: Origami Meets Math and Science," Thomas Hull
Origami, the art of paper folding, has been practiced in Japan and all over the world for centuries. The past decade, however, has witnessed a surge of interest in using origami for science. Applications in robotics, airbag design, deployment of space structures, and even medicine and bioengineering are appearing in the popular science press. Videos of origami robots folding themselves up and walking away or performing tasks have gone viral in recent years. But if the art of paper folding is so old, why has there been an increase in origami applications now? One answer is because of mathematics. Advances in our understanding of how folding processes work has arisen due to success in modeling origami mathematically. In this presentation we will explore why origami lends itself to mathematic...
published: 13 Dec 2015
56:29
"Folding a New Tomorrow: Origami Meets Math and Science," Thomas Hull
Origami, the art of paper folding, has been practiced in Japan and all over the world for centuries. The past decade, however, has witnessed a surge of interest...
Origami, the art of paper folding, has been practiced in Japan and all over the world for centuries. The past decade, however, has witnessed a surge of interest in using origami for science. Applications in robotics, airbag design, deployment of space structures, and even medicine and bioengineering are appearing in the popular science press. Videos of origami robots folding themselves up and walking away or performing tasks have gone viral in recent years. But if the art of paper folding is so old, why has there been an increase in origami applications now? One answer is because of mathematics. Advances in our understanding of how folding processes work has arisen due to success in modeling origami mathematically. In this presentation we will explore why origami lends itself to mathematical study and see some of the math that has allowed applications to become so fruitful.
https://wn.com/Folding_A_New_Tomorrow_Origami_Meets_Math_And_Science,_Thomas_Hull
Origami, the art of paper folding, has been practiced in Japan and all over the world for centuries. The past decade, however, has witnessed a surge of interest in using origami for science. Applications in robotics, airbag design, deployment of space structures, and even medicine and bioengineering are appearing in the popular science press. Videos of origami robots folding themselves up and walking away or performing tasks have gone viral in recent years. But if the art of paper folding is so old, why has there been an increase in origami applications now? One answer is because of mathematics. Advances in our understanding of how folding processes work has arisen due to success in modeling origami mathematically. In this presentation we will explore why origami lends itself to mathematical study and see some of the math that has allowed applications to become so fruitful.
- published: 13 Dec 2015
- views: 30956
6:41
Five Intersecting Tetrahedra (Thomas Hull)
How to make the Five Intersecting Tetrahedra, designed by Thomas Hull
Presented here by Jo Nakashima with permission of the creator
Difficulty level: easy t...
How to make the Five Intersecting Tetrahedra, designed by Thomas Hull
Presented here by Jo Nakashima with permission of the creator
Difficulty level: easy to make the modules, very hard to assembly
My paper: 9cm x 3cm each module (30 sheets)
Don't know the name of this paper in english, it is some kind of thick foil paper (cartolina laminada em português)
My old video with complete assembly:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aT2UHxA4uRY
How to fold thirds (if you have squares, you'll need to cut into thirds to get the starting rectangle):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbijRcl9PMI
Thomas Hull's home page and YouTube channel:
http://mars.wnec.edu/~th297133/
http://www.youtube.com/user/tomhull17
My Facebook page:
http://www.facebook.com/JoOrigami
http://kahuna.merrimack.edu/~thull/fit.html .
========================================
Commercial use is not allowed without prior written permission from the author.
Please contact the author to ask for commercial licensing
========================================
https://wn.com/Five_Intersecting_Tetrahedra_(Thomas_Hull)
How to make the Five Intersecting Tetrahedra, designed by Thomas Hull
Presented here by Jo Nakashima with permission of the creator
Difficulty level: easy to make the modules, very hard to assembly
My paper: 9cm x 3cm each module (30 sheets)
Don't know the name of this paper in english, it is some kind of thick foil paper (cartolina laminada em português)
My old video with complete assembly:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aT2UHxA4uRY
How to fold thirds (if you have squares, you'll need to cut into thirds to get the starting rectangle):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbijRcl9PMI
Thomas Hull's home page and YouTube channel:
http://mars.wnec.edu/~th297133/
http://www.youtube.com/user/tomhull17
My Facebook page:
http://www.facebook.com/JoOrigami
http://kahuna.merrimack.edu/~thull/fit.html .
========================================
Commercial use is not allowed without prior written permission from the author.
Please contact the author to ask for commercial licensing
========================================
- published: 02 Aug 2011
- views: 220745
5:58
Five Intersecting Tetrahedra Origami (Thomas Hull)
How to make five intersecting tetrahedra designed by Thomas Hull.
Presented here by Jo Nakashima with permission of the creator
Tom Hull's home page:
http:...
How to make five intersecting tetrahedra designed by Thomas Hull.
Presented here by Jo Nakashima with permission of the creator
Tom Hull's home page:
http://mars.wnec.edu/~th297133/
Each module has 5cm x 15cm. You'll need 6 modules for each tetrahedron (total of 5 x 6 = 30 modules). In this video I'm showing only how to make one tetrahedron, you'll need to build 5 all intersecting. In the link below you can find the diagram and some tips on joining the modules:
http://kahuna.merrimack.edu/~thull/fit.html
It really is a challenging puzzle to put it all together but it is also very fun! Good luck!
If you were not able (or don't wanna try) to intersect all tetrahedra, there is another video showing the complete assembly:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aT2UHxA4uRY
MY FACEBOOK PAGE:
http://www.facebook.com/JoOrigami .
========================================
Commercial use is not allowed without prior written permission from the author.
Please contact the author to ask for commercial licensing
========================================
https://wn.com/Five_Intersecting_Tetrahedra_Origami_(Thomas_Hull)
How to make five intersecting tetrahedra designed by Thomas Hull.
Presented here by Jo Nakashima with permission of the creator
Tom Hull's home page:
http://mars.wnec.edu/~th297133/
Each module has 5cm x 15cm. You'll need 6 modules for each tetrahedron (total of 5 x 6 = 30 modules). In this video I'm showing only how to make one tetrahedron, you'll need to build 5 all intersecting. In the link below you can find the diagram and some tips on joining the modules:
http://kahuna.merrimack.edu/~thull/fit.html
It really is a challenging puzzle to put it all together but it is also very fun! Good luck!
If you were not able (or don't wanna try) to intersect all tetrahedra, there is another video showing the complete assembly:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aT2UHxA4uRY
MY FACEBOOK PAGE:
http://www.facebook.com/JoOrigami .
========================================
Commercial use is not allowed without prior written permission from the author.
Please contact the author to ask for commercial licensing
========================================
- published: 18 Dec 2009
- views: 685103
3:20
HULL CITY VS SHEFFIELD UNITED 5-3: Goals and highlights FA Cup Semi Final HD
Hull City edged an eight-goal thriller at Wembley to make it through to their first-ever FA Cup Final at the expense of League One Sheffield United.
Trailing 2...
Hull City edged an eight-goal thriller at Wembley to make it through to their first-ever FA Cup Final at the expense of League One Sheffield United.
Trailing 2-1 at the break, four second-half strikes from Matty Fryatt, Tom Huddlestone, Stephen Quinn and David Meyler completed a stirring comeback.
Nigel Clough's Blades had impressed and shocked in equal measure during their run to the last four, a run which had accounted for Aston Villa and Fulham in the earlier rounds.
They were aiming to become the first side from the third tier to reach The Cup Final since the formation of the Football League in 1888.
And they appeared on course to complete their historic mission when Jose Baxter and Stefan Scougall each steered home low crosses to cancel out Yannick Sagbo's first-half strike.
Bruce made a double change at the break, bringing on Fryatt and Sone Aluko for George Boyd and Maynor Figueroa, and his team reaped the reward, scoring three times in 18 minutes to effectively set up a showpiece clash with Arsenal next month.
Jamie Murphy pulled a goal back for United in the final minute, but Meyler had the final say by completing the scoring in added time.
The opening quarter of this Semi-Final, the 900th match to be played at Wembley Stadium, sailed by without incident -- save for Huddlestone's speculative effort from the halfway line that Mark Howard gathered comfortably. However, the remaining 70 minutes more than made up for a lacklustre start.
Both sets of supporters were in terrific voice in the April sunshine, and there was arguably more going on in the stands than on the pitch early on -- until Baxter lit the touch paper for a breathless hour of action.
The Blades won a throw-in deep in the Hull half, the bearded John Brayford delivered a low centre and former Everton forward Baxter, who helped Oldham knock out Liverpool in last season's Fourth Round, stole in at the near post ahead of James Chester to direct the ball home -- and send the hoards of red-and-white-shirted fans wild at the far end of the ground.
United grew in confidence and a passage of passing midway through the first half had their fans 'Ole-ing'.
However, unable to capitalise on their dominance, the Bramall Lane outfit were undone by a magnificent piece of play from Jake Livermore. With the interval approaching, the Tottenham loanee dissected the United defence with a wonderful through ball to the far post which Sagbo plundered into the roof of the net for the equaliser.
City's joy was very short-lived, though, as United responded immediately. Murphy did brilliantly to scamper down the left flank, past two Hull defenders, and sent a ball into the box which Scougall lashed home from six yards out to give the Blades a deserved half-time advantage.
But the half-time changes paid dividends for Hull, who were on top straight from the restart.
Fryatt levelled four minutes into the second half, turning home from close range after Chester's miscued shot fell invitingly for him just a few yards out.
The substitute thought he had a quick-fire second until he turned round to see the assistant's flag raised for offside.
The third goal did come just moments later. Huddlestone played a neat one-two with Meyler, skipped into the box and placed a left-foot curler beyond Howard's desperate dive.
Tom Huddlestone slots home for Hull
Tom Huddlestone slots home after dancing through the Blades defence
And another substitute, Quinn, seemingly put the game beyond United when he nodded home Livermore's cross just after the hour mark, but the impressive Murphy gave his side the faintest of hopes when he smashed home in the final minute.
The Blades were in full voice once more, urging their team to pull off a remarkable draw, but Hull broke away and Meyler slotted home in added time to seal victory.
To find out more about the FA visit:
http://thefa.com
Follow us on Twitter:
http://twitter.com/FA
The FA Cup on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/TheFACup
England on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/EnglandTeam
FAWSL on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/FAWSL
https://wn.com/Hull_City_Vs_Sheffield_United_5_3_Goals_And_Highlights_Fa_Cup_Semi_Final_Hd
Hull City edged an eight-goal thriller at Wembley to make it through to their first-ever FA Cup Final at the expense of League One Sheffield United.
Trailing 2-1 at the break, four second-half strikes from Matty Fryatt, Tom Huddlestone, Stephen Quinn and David Meyler completed a stirring comeback.
Nigel Clough's Blades had impressed and shocked in equal measure during their run to the last four, a run which had accounted for Aston Villa and Fulham in the earlier rounds.
They were aiming to become the first side from the third tier to reach The Cup Final since the formation of the Football League in 1888.
And they appeared on course to complete their historic mission when Jose Baxter and Stefan Scougall each steered home low crosses to cancel out Yannick Sagbo's first-half strike.
Bruce made a double change at the break, bringing on Fryatt and Sone Aluko for George Boyd and Maynor Figueroa, and his team reaped the reward, scoring three times in 18 minutes to effectively set up a showpiece clash with Arsenal next month.
Jamie Murphy pulled a goal back for United in the final minute, but Meyler had the final say by completing the scoring in added time.
The opening quarter of this Semi-Final, the 900th match to be played at Wembley Stadium, sailed by without incident -- save for Huddlestone's speculative effort from the halfway line that Mark Howard gathered comfortably. However, the remaining 70 minutes more than made up for a lacklustre start.
Both sets of supporters were in terrific voice in the April sunshine, and there was arguably more going on in the stands than on the pitch early on -- until Baxter lit the touch paper for a breathless hour of action.
The Blades won a throw-in deep in the Hull half, the bearded John Brayford delivered a low centre and former Everton forward Baxter, who helped Oldham knock out Liverpool in last season's Fourth Round, stole in at the near post ahead of James Chester to direct the ball home -- and send the hoards of red-and-white-shirted fans wild at the far end of the ground.
United grew in confidence and a passage of passing midway through the first half had their fans 'Ole-ing'.
However, unable to capitalise on their dominance, the Bramall Lane outfit were undone by a magnificent piece of play from Jake Livermore. With the interval approaching, the Tottenham loanee dissected the United defence with a wonderful through ball to the far post which Sagbo plundered into the roof of the net for the equaliser.
City's joy was very short-lived, though, as United responded immediately. Murphy did brilliantly to scamper down the left flank, past two Hull defenders, and sent a ball into the box which Scougall lashed home from six yards out to give the Blades a deserved half-time advantage.
But the half-time changes paid dividends for Hull, who were on top straight from the restart.
Fryatt levelled four minutes into the second half, turning home from close range after Chester's miscued shot fell invitingly for him just a few yards out.
The substitute thought he had a quick-fire second until he turned round to see the assistant's flag raised for offside.
The third goal did come just moments later. Huddlestone played a neat one-two with Meyler, skipped into the box and placed a left-foot curler beyond Howard's desperate dive.
Tom Huddlestone slots home for Hull
Tom Huddlestone slots home after dancing through the Blades defence
And another substitute, Quinn, seemingly put the game beyond United when he nodded home Livermore's cross just after the hour mark, but the impressive Murphy gave his side the faintest of hopes when he smashed home in the final minute.
The Blades were in full voice once more, urging their team to pull off a remarkable draw, but Hull broke away and Meyler slotted home in added time to seal victory.
To find out more about the FA visit:
http://thefa.com
Follow us on Twitter:
http://twitter.com/FA
The FA Cup on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/TheFACup
England on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/EnglandTeam
FAWSL on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/FAWSL
- published: 14 Apr 2014
- views: 191490
1:38
Origami ball from 120 PHiZZ units by Tom Hull
Hello!
This our origami ball from 120 PHiZZ units (pentagon-hexagon zig-zag unit). The first buckyball is made from 30 units. The second one is made from 120 u...
Hello!
This our origami ball from 120 PHiZZ units (pentagon-hexagon zig-zag unit). The first buckyball is made from 30 units. The second one is made from 120 units. You can make this big ones by making pentagons ànd hexagons.
Check out this cool channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4oFiqHQZuFCLDBqGN2y8uA
New video every thursday, tuesday and saturday!
Paper used in the video: regular origami paper 7,5x7,5cm
Enjoy!
https://wn.com/Origami_Ball_From_120_Phizz_Units_By_Tom_Hull
Hello!
This our origami ball from 120 PHiZZ units (pentagon-hexagon zig-zag unit). The first buckyball is made from 30 units. The second one is made from 120 units. You can make this big ones by making pentagons ànd hexagons.
Check out this cool channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4oFiqHQZuFCLDBqGN2y8uA
New video every thursday, tuesday and saturday!
Paper used in the video: regular origami paper 7,5x7,5cm
Enjoy!
- published: 10 Jun 2014
- views: 2861
13:15
Origami 5 Intersecting Tetrahedra Tetrahedron Tutorial designed by Thomas Hull (ASMR Paper Folding)
Subscribe and hit that bell icon to be notified when we upload!
5 Intersecting Tetrahedra is created by Thomas Hull.
In this tutorial I used 30 sheets of 5x15...
Subscribe and hit that bell icon to be notified when we upload!
5 Intersecting Tetrahedra is created by Thomas Hull.
In this tutorial I used 30 sheets of 5x15cm paper and a small piece of paper as a note. Glue is optional.
I used 5 different colours to make it easier to follow along.
Difficulty ★★★★★ / Advanced Origami
Timestamps:
0:11 - Step 1: Making a unit
2:14 - Step 2: Making a 3 piece unit
2:44 - Step 3: Making a tetrahedron
3:58 - Step 4: Assembling
Music:
"Little Idea" by www.bensound.com
https://wn.com/Origami_5_Intersecting_Tetrahedra_Tetrahedron_Tutorial_Designed_By_Thomas_Hull_(Asmr_Paper_Folding)
Subscribe and hit that bell icon to be notified when we upload!
5 Intersecting Tetrahedra is created by Thomas Hull.
In this tutorial I used 30 sheets of 5x15cm paper and a small piece of paper as a note. Glue is optional.
I used 5 different colours to make it easier to follow along.
Difficulty ★★★★★ / Advanced Origami
Timestamps:
0:11 - Step 1: Making a unit
2:14 - Step 2: Making a 3 piece unit
2:44 - Step 3: Making a tetrahedron
3:58 - Step 4: Assembling
Music:
"Little Idea" by www.bensound.com
- published: 16 Jan 2019
- views: 47034
0:37
"Wooden" Five Intersecting Tetrahedra (Thomas Hull) - Not a tutorial
Just showing another origami using the wood effect
Tutorial: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBcvoTm4MPc
Material:
- Copy paper (9cm x 3cm. 30 units)
- D...
Just showing another origami using the wood effect
Tutorial: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBcvoTm4MPc
Material:
- Copy paper (9cm x 3cm. 30 units)
- Décopatch Wood Effect (a tissue paper with the wood pattern)
http://www.origami-shop.com/fiche_article.php?ref=8&products;_id=1529&affiliate;_banner_id=1
Looks like it is not available at this moment... :(
- Glue (just to glue the décopatch to the copy paper)
Time spent: about 3 hours
Music:
Isolated
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons "Attribution 3.0"
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ .
========================================
Commercial use is not allowed without prior written permission from the author.
Please contact the author to ask for commercial licensing
========================================
https://wn.com/Wooden_Five_Intersecting_Tetrahedra_(Thomas_Hull)_Not_A_Tutorial
Just showing another origami using the wood effect
Tutorial: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBcvoTm4MPc
Material:
- Copy paper (9cm x 3cm. 30 units)
- Décopatch Wood Effect (a tissue paper with the wood pattern)
http://www.origami-shop.com/fiche_article.php?ref=8&products;_id=1529&affiliate;_banner_id=1
Looks like it is not available at this moment... :(
- Glue (just to glue the décopatch to the copy paper)
Time spent: about 3 hours
Music:
Isolated
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons "Attribution 3.0"
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ .
========================================
Commercial use is not allowed without prior written permission from the author.
Please contact the author to ask for commercial licensing
========================================
- published: 25 Aug 2011
- views: 28687
1:00:02
stories from the Hull Blitz
A documentary about the bombing of Hull in World War Two, featuring eye witness accounts and narrative readings by Tom Courtenay.
A documentary about the bombing of Hull in World War Two, featuring eye witness accounts and narrative readings by Tom Courtenay.
https://wn.com/Stories_From_The_Hull_Blitz
A documentary about the bombing of Hull in World War Two, featuring eye witness accounts and narrative readings by Tom Courtenay.
- published: 22 Mar 2018
- views: 334
15:12
"Folding a New Tomorrow: Origami Meets Math and Science," Thomas Hull
Origami, the art of paper folding, has been practiced in Japan and all over the world for centuries. The past decade, however, has witnessed a surge of interest...
Origami, the art of paper folding, has been practiced in Japan and all over the world for centuries. The past decade, however, has witnessed a surge of interest in using origami for science. Applications in robotics, airbag design, deployment of space structures, and even medicine and bioengineering are appearing in the popular science press. Videos of origami robots folding themselves up and walking away or performing tasks have gone viral in recent years. But if the art of paper folding is so old, why has there been an increase in origami applications now? One answer is because of mathematics. Advances in our understanding of how folding processes work has arisen due to success in modeling origami mathematically. In this presentation we will explore why origami lends itself to mathematical study and see some of the math that has allowed applications to become so fruitful.
https://wn.com/Folding_A_New_Tomorrow_Origami_Meets_Math_And_Science,_Thomas_Hull
Origami, the art of paper folding, has been practiced in Japan and all over the world for centuries. The past decade, however, has witnessed a surge of interest in using origami for science. Applications in robotics, airbag design, deployment of space structures, and even medicine and bioengineering are appearing in the popular science press. Videos of origami robots folding themselves up and walking away or performing tasks have gone viral in recent years. But if the art of paper folding is so old, why has there been an increase in origami applications now? One answer is because of mathematics. Advances in our understanding of how folding processes work has arisen due to success in modeling origami mathematically. In this presentation we will explore why origami lends itself to mathematical study and see some of the math that has allowed applications to become so fruitful.
- published: 13 Dec 2015
- views: 6356