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After 4 pages I'm sure you are thinking about the history of origami.

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In Japan, the earliest unambiguous reference to a paper model is in a short sonnet by Ihara Saikaku in 1680 which specifies a conventional butterfly configuration utilized during Shinto weddings. Collapsing filled some formal capacities in Edo period Japanese culture; noshi were connected to blessings, similar to how welcome cards are utilized today. 

In Europe, there was an all-around created sort of napkin collapsing, which thrived during the seventeenth and eighteenth hundreds of years. After this period, this sort declined and was generally failed to remember; antiquarian Joan Sallas credits this to the presentation of porcelain, which supplanted complex napkin folds as a supper table superficial point of interest among honorability.

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Another illustration of early origami in Europe is the "parajita," an adapted bird whose beginnings date from at any rate the nineteenth century. 

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