Why does paper fold so well?

(bbc.co.uk)

32 points | by zeristor 1 day ago

4 comments

  • srean 36 minutes ago
    Oh no! woe is me, they don't highlight my absolutely, ridiculously favourite fact/curiosity about a sheet of smooth paper:

    If you fold it clean, the crease is a straight line. In fact I don't know of any other good way of obtaining a straight edge from scratch quickly, meaning without transporting one existing straight edge to another (*).

    I remember spending a lot of enamored time coming up with different geometrical proofs of this fact. Perhaps the only time I have come close to jumping out of the proverbial bath tub.

    The underlying reason is that paper does not stretch (**) (but, paradoxically, it does bend fine. It's a paradox because bending needs stretching).

    I have to restrain myself from grabbing strangers off the streets to ask -- how cool is that. Two other demonstrations that never fail to nerd snipe me are the belt trick, that straight woven cloth rips usually make a 90 degrees, and a teeny tiny metacircular interpreter.

    (*) Rope stretching is a close competitor, but the tension needs to be really really high and it is difficult to run a pencil along it to mark a straight line, lest you distort the st. line.

    (**) of course, it does, but a tiny amount.

    • arijun 1 minute ago
      > The underlying reason is that paper does not stretch

      I don't think that's sufficient--tinfoil doesn't stretch, but it doesn't fold nearly as neatly as paper.

  • borutz 1 hour ago
  • yread 47 minutes ago
    And why does it sink. Its basically squished wood!
    • OJFord 18 minutes ago
      I really can't imagine getting paper to sink any more easily than wood?
  • zeristor 1 day ago
    A lovely little podcast on paper physics for origami.