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In this video, I share a surprising discovery I made while preparing my Senbazuru Challenge tutorials: there isn’t just one way to fold the iconic paper crane — there are actually two distinct folding methods… and almost no one talks about it. If you defend one of these methods and feel frustrated or resentful when others prefer the “wrong” one, please consider this: most paper folders — myself included — genuinely don’t or didn’t know there were two methods. For many of us, this was a hidden detail until now. Most tutorials never mention it. 💬 Have insights on those folding origins? Share them in the comments — I’d love to learn more. If you enjoy this kind of origami deep dive, please like, subscribe, and join me for more mindful folding. Until next time, happy folding 💫 Additional thoughts: 🕊 The “Traditional Japanese” Crane • Origins: Passed down in Japan since at least the Edo period, deeply tied to cultural practices like senbazuru (strings of 1,000 cranes). • Heritage: Folding this way connects you to a living tradition and centuries of cultural meaning. 🌏 The “International” or “Modern” Crane • Origins: Common in Western origami books from the mid 20th century onward. • Why It Exists: As origami spread internationally, teachers adapted the sequence for clarity in printed diagrams — sometimes shortening steps or re ordering them to match Western diagramming conventions. • Not Wrong: It’s simply a different teaching lineage. 💡 The truth: The “two cranes” are really the same end model — the differences are in pedagogy and heritage. The Japanese sequence carries cultural weight; the international one is a streamlined teaching adaptation. And this isn’t unique to the crane — many well known origami models have multiple folding styles or “schools” of approach. Sometimes they evolved in different cultural contexts, sometimes they were streamlined for teaching, and sometimes folders just enjoy experimenting with the sequence. Resources & References: For the traditional Japanese method: Japanese Origami: How to Fold a Paper Crane by the Asia Society Texas Center: • Japanese Origami: How to Fold a Paper Crane Japanese Classic Origami Crane by Origami & Cat's Cradle: • Japanese Classic Origami Crane (Level: 7 y... Diagram found on https://homesthetics.net/ For the modern international method: Diagram found on www.origami-fun.com ⏱️Timestamps: 0:00 Intro 0:21 The revelation 2:32 The differences 3:10 The consequences 3:35 Why it should matter (or not) 4:30 Final advice 4:53 Bloopers ♫ Music credits: ♪ “Creamy” by Limujii (Source: https://freetouse.com/music - No Copyright Vlog Music for Videos) ꩜ Additional sounds by La Sonothèque