One thousand origami cranes

Thousand Origami Cranes (千羽鶴 Senbazuru) is a group of one thousand origami paper cranes held together by strings. An ancient Japanese legend promises that anyone who folds a thousand origami cranes will be granted a wish by the Gods. Some stories believe you are granted eternal good luck, instead of just one wish, such as long life or recovery from illness or injury.

It turns out that even if one has no particular skill at origami, if one folds something about 1000 and five times, one gets surprisingly good.

Here is some stats I’ve gathered on this process:

  • The whole project has lasted for 252 days, I have only spent 41 days actually folding.
  • On average, I made about 24 cranes at a time. There have been at least 10 days where I’ve made only 10 cranes and two very productive days where I’ve made 70. Further to this, I made 20 on 16 different occasions, 30 on 4 different occasions, 40 on 6 different occasions and 50 on 1 occasion.
  • The longest streak was 9 days in March and the longest break was for 64 days.

I am pretty sure I can fold a crane in under a minute now.

Comments

  1. What are the dimensions on your display? I am almost finished with mine and right now they are in 6 gallon jars.

    1. It’s not a perfect cylinder, but if I assume it was the height is 11.5″ and circumference is 25″, according to ChatGPT it’s 2.48 gallons / 9.3 litres.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *