mscroggs.co.uk
mscroggs.co.uk

subscribe

Blog

 2012-10-06 
This is the first post in a series of posts about tube map folding.
This week, after re-reading chapter two of Alex's Adventures in Numberland (where Alex learns to fold business cards into tetrahedrons, cubes and octahedrons) on the tube, I folded two tube maps into a tetrahedron:
Following this, I folded a cube, an octahedron and an icosahedron:
The tetrahedron, icosahedron and octahedron were all made in the same way, as seen in Numberland: folding the map in two, so that a pair of opposite corners meet, then folding the sides over to make a triangle:
In order to get an equilateral triangle at this point, paper with sides in a ratio of 1:√3 is required. Although it is not exact, the proportions of a tube map are close enough to this to get an almost equilateral triangle. Putting one of these pieces together with a mirror image piece (one where the other two corners were folded together at the start) gives a tetrahedron. The larger solids are obtained by using a larger number of maps.
The cube—also found in Numberland—can me made by placing two tube maps on each other at right angles and folding over the extra length:
Six of these pieces combine to give a cube.
Finally this morning, with a little help from the internet, I folded a dodecahedron, thus completing all the Platonic solids:
To spread the joy of folding tube maps, each time I take the tube, I am going to fold a tetrahedron from two maps and leave it on the maps when I leave the tube. I started this yesterday, leaving a tetrahedron on the maps at South Harrow. In the evening, it was still there:
Do you think it will still be there on Monday morning? How often do you think I will return to find a tetrahedron still there? I will be keeping a tetrahedron diary so we can find out the answers to these most important questions...
This is the first post in a series of posts about tube map folding.
      ×5      ×5      ×3      ×3
(Click on one of these icons to react to this blog post)

You might also enjoy...

Comments

Comments in green were written by me. Comments in blue were not written by me.
New test comment please ignore
Matthew
×5   ×4   ×6   ×5   ×5     Reply
Test comment please ignore
Matthew
×4   ×7   ×8   ×5   ×5     Reply
 Add a Comment 


I will only use your email address to reply to your comment (if a reply is needed).

Allowed HTML tags: <br> <a> <small> <b> <i> <s> <sup> <sub> <u> <spoiler> <ul> <ol> <li> <logo>
To prove you are not a spam bot, please type "nogaxeh" backwards in the box below (case sensitive):

Archive

Show me a random blog post
 2025 

Jun 2025

A nonogram alphabet

Mar 2025

How to write a crossnumber

Jan 2025

Christmas (2024) is over
Friendly squares
 2024 
▼ show ▼
 2023 
▼ show ▼
 2022 
▼ show ▼
 2021 
▼ show ▼
 2020 
▼ show ▼
 2019 
▼ show ▼
 2018 
▼ show ▼
 2017 
▼ show ▼
 2016 
▼ show ▼
 2015 
▼ show ▼
 2014 
▼ show ▼
 2013 
▼ show ▼
 2012 
▼ show ▼

Tags

world cup reuleaux polygons realhats crochet weather station triangles hexapawn pizza cutting books radio 4 matt parker countdown chalkdust magazine computational complexity pascal's triangle sobolev spaces gather town errors bubble bobble european cup golden spiral manchester science festival numbers the aperiodical dinosaurs javascript ucl hats python harriss spiral sport fractals royal baby talking maths in public advent calendar quadrilaterals accuracy binary correlation guest posts london underground approximation data visualisation a gamut of games databet stirling numbers frobel kings tmip chess matrices puzzles folding paper bempp regular expressions geometry logo 24 hour maths noughts and crosses preconditioning mathslogicbot arithmetic cross stitch nine men's morris simultaneous equations draughts platonic solids flexagons pi light graphs plastic ratio estimation determinants runge's phenomenon gerry anderson asteroids folding tube maps sorting geogebra menace football fence posts martin gardner recursion statistics game show probability convergence chebyshev edinburgh hyperbolic surfaces stickers exponential growth captain scarlet big internet math-off pythagoras london latex crosswords pac-man alphabets inverse matrices trigonometry numerical analysis newcastle news mathsjam matrix of minors inline code sound people maths datasaurus dozen crossnumbers palindromes live stream propositional calculus reddit games map projections mean machine learning friendly squares final fantasy wave scattering interpolation logic fonts ternary dragon curves programming video games squares php curvature anscombe's quartet golden ratio zines electromagnetic field matrix of cofactors craft standard deviation weak imposition braiding tennis bodmas manchester national lottery coins rhombicuboctahedron crossnumber graph theory finite group error bars probability youtube wool speed matrix multiplication raspberry pi polynomials rugby cambridge hannah fry finite element method turtles data logs boundary element methods nonograms christmas card bots gaussian elimination oeis mathsteroids dataset pi approximation day game of life phd christmas dates signorini conditions go misleading statistics royal institution

Archive

Show me a random blog post
▼ show ▼
© Matthew Scroggs 2012–2025