The paper wasn't finished. It wanted to be three-dimensional. Using techniques from Seyed Masoud Hosseini's or Thomas Hull's tutorials, it locked its own edges together without any glue, creating a solid, interlocking pentagonal star that could spin or adorn a tree.
It looked at the pentagon and felt it was missing something. It wanted to be a star .
The final creation was a perfect, sharp-pointed star, ready for the holiday season. 📝 Summary of Methods to Get Your Star
The paper folded itself into a precise pentagon using the simple origami trick of folding, marking, and cutting, transforming from four sides to five.
This story is about a journey into the world of papercraft and geometry, transforming a simple square into a five-pointed star using the techniques mentioned in the search results. The Tale of the Pentagonal Star (تحميل)
Create a pentagram by finding fifths of a circle or using a protractor to make a 108∘108 raised to the composed with power angle, then drawing lines to connect the vertices.
Create a 5-pointed star from a single square of paper, often starting with a pentagon base.