To Mitsuhisa Imamori, there is nothing more fun than grabbing a pair of scissors and participating in kirigami. With little more than some paper and a trusted pair of scissors all sorts of beautiful papercrafts can be made by folding, flipping and ulitmately cutting sheets of paper.
And nothing can rival the smiles that arise when someone is taught how to kirigami. Imagine making delicate snowflakes or beautiful flowers with a few flicks of the wrist. And for more advanced paper-craft artists more complicated designs can be achieved through practice and enginuity. Everyboday Kirigami! brings the joy that Mr. Imamori has experienced teaching kirigami in Japan to a Western audience. The concept is simple - transform a simple sheet of paper into a piece of art by folding and cutting. But Imamori's vision of Kirigami has many more applications. His patterns can be used for their functionality, by utilizing them with cloth for appliques, cutting into fabric or vinyl for decorations and for design use in the realms of book binding and card making. Featuring 72 clever designs and a range of different cutting techniques crafters can, with little effort, make their own cutouts for display, decoration, or embellishment. Once they've mastered the basics, Imamori provides ideas to help crafters come up with their own original projects. Everybody Kirigami comes with 30 pages of ready-to-fold-and-cut patterns, on both craft paper and delicate Japanese rice paper, along with dozens of stensils to quickly get eager crafters going!Unfold the Excitement!
Everybody Kirigami!
Mitsuhisa Imamori
Arts & Crafts
Paperback, 88 pages, approx 7 x 10 inches
978-1-939130-17-4 Buy.
U.S.$18.95 / CAN$19.95
Author's Bio
Born in 1954 in Shiga Prefecture, Japan. After graduating college, Mitsuhiko Imamori taught himself photography. He has been an enthusiastic creator of kirigami since elementary school. After a brief suspension, he picked up the hobby again in 1995 and in 2006 published his first kirigami book, followed by two more in 2008. He has presented kirigami in national newspaper articles and on television (NHK), the craft becoming his life's work in a new development. He has also published essays and award-winning photography collections.