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What next?

19/9/2012

1 Comment

 
People often ask me what my next model will be - the fact is, I never can say with any certainty.

Sometimes, if inspiration strikes, I can sit down and design a new model on the first attempt, such as the Hailfire Droid or Naboo Starfighter. Other times I'm trying for one model and end up with the paper leading me in a completely different direction - the Trade Federation Landing Craft was originally intended to be a Vulture Droid!

And then there are those models that persist in eluding me completely. I've had numerous attempts at a Slave 1, Y-Wing or A.T.S.T., but have yet to find an approach for any of them that even comes close. The X-Wing was another model I had to revisit several times, and it took 5 years from my first attempt to come up with the final model shown on the site today.

A trawl through wookieepedia gives a list of possible models I could consider making - There are some that I feel are absolute must-haves for the book, that are too iconic to leave out, and others which are not distinctive enough to warrant their own unique designs. I've marked up what I think my priorities should be, but feel free to let me know in the comments anything I may have missed or that you think I should bump up the list!

Original Trilogy

Prequels

Clone Wars

Expanded Universe

  • A.T.S.T. ****
  • Snowspeeder ****
  • Slave 1 ****
  • Death Star
  • Death Star II **
  • Sail Barge *
  • Desert Skiff
  • Twin Pod Cloud Car
  • Cloud City *
  • Y-Wing ****
  • Rebel Transport
  • Nebulon-B Medical Frigate *
  • T.I.E. Bomber
  • Super Star Destroyer *
  • Rebel Blockade Runner **
  • Sandcrawler *
  • Probe Droid *
  • T16 Skyhopper
  • Mon Calamari Cruiser 
  • Imperial Landing Craft 
  • Gonk Droid
  • Mouse Droid

  • ARC Starfighter **
  • A.T.T.E. **
  • Vulture Droid ***
  • Droideka ***
  • Republic Gunship ***
  • Republic Cruiser *
  • Sith Infiltrator **
  • Sebulba's Podracer *
  • Anakin's Podracer *
  • Gungan Sub ***
  • M.T.T. **
  • Droid Tri-fighter *
  • Naboo Royal Starship **
  • Naboo Royal Cruiser **
  • Naboo Royal Yacht
  • Jedi Starfighter *
  • Jedi Interceptor **
  • Solar Sailer
  • Geonosian Starfighter
  • Dwarf Spider Droid
  • Clone Turbo Tank
  • Darth Maul's Speeder Bike
  • Swoop
  • General Grevious' Starfighter **
  • Droid Control Ship
  • Nemoidean Shuttle
  • AT-RT
  • Gian Speeder
  • S.T.A.P. **
  • Invisible Hand
  • V-Wing
  • Gian Speeder
  • Tank Droid
  • Droid Gunship
  • Flash Speeder
  • Homing Spider Droid
  • Grevious Wheel Bike
  • Venator **
  • P-38 Starfighter
  • Theta Shuttle
  • V19 Torrent **
  • Geonosian Fanblade Starfighter *
  • Malevolence
  • BARC Speeder
  • Twilight *
  • Hyena Bomber
  • Hound's Tooth
  • Republic Attack Shuttle
  • Trident Assault Craft
  • Republic Fighter Tank
  • Outrider *
  • E-Wing
  • AT-PT
  • Rogue Shadow
  • Z95 Headhunter
  • Ebon Hawk
  • Moldy Crow
  • Raven's Claw
  • T.I.E./d
  • T.I.E. Crawler
  • T.I.E. Defender
1 Comment

It's all about me, me, me...

4/9/2012

1 Comment

 
As a child, my only exposure to origami were the playground folds that everyone learns at school - the flapping bird, the fortune teller, the paper boat - great fun for kids, but that was all.

It wasn't until I was at university that I opened up the doors to the amazing number of possibilities that were out there to completely transform a humble piece of paper. I picked up a book of origami as a cheap way to pass the time between lectures, and jumped straight in with the most advanced book I could find in the shop at the time - Robert Lang's Complete Book of Origami.

I struggled with some of the models at first, having dived straight in at the deep end, but my Maths degree stood me in good stead and I quickly picked up a rudimentary understanding of the techniques involved. After breezing through several more of Lang's books and most of John Montroll's back catalogue, my thoughts turned to designing a few model's of my own.

It was around the same time of the theatrical release of The Phantom Menace, so my mind, like many others round the world was filled with all things Star Wars. It was only natural then, that my first foray into origami design would also follow suit. The resulting model, an X-Wing folded from the traditional frog base, was nothing special, and it would be a ship I revisited time and time again, but it set me on a path that leads all the way to the present day.

For a few years, I came up with new models on a regular basis - the Millennium Falcon was the first of the current generation of models to see the light of day, quickly followed by the Star Destroyer, which was born from a bus ticket during a particularly long traffic jam! But by 2004, with my student years a distant memory, real life was beginning to take hold. A new job, a new city, a mortgage, marriage, and a brief flirtation with cancer, all conspired to put my dream of publishing a book of my own origami design on hold, indefinitely...

...until, at the end of 2011, a spur of the moment decision to attend a meeting of the British Origami Society, wound up with me agreeing to fold some large scale version of my designs for display at the London MCM Expo. The positive feedback I received at this event rekindled my passion, and I resolved to go all out to make that dream a reality. I set up facebook and twitter accounts to gauge the public interest, and a new improved website followed in short order. 

Obviously, with the long-awaited release of Chris Alexander's Star Wars Origami book, I've been beaten to the punch. But I sincerely believe there is room on the market for a more detailed and grown-up approach to the material to also be a success, and with enough support, I'm sure I'll be able to convince Lucasfilm to give me the chance to prove it!
1 Comment

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All origami models shown on this website are copyright of Martin Hunt
All Star Wars references are trademarks of Lucasfilm and are used here without permission

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