Paper Folding - Intermediate Level: paper folding patterns INTERMEDIATE

Master paper folding concepts through this excellence pursuit practice set. Worksheet 16 of 30 contains 20 intermediate-level problems. Deep dive into paper folding patterns while learning folded shapes, crease patterns, fold sequence. Recommended for mid-level learners aiming for moderate complexity with mixed patterns.

📝 Worksheet 16 of 30 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Intermediate level

What you'll learn in this worksheet:
Your progress through Paper Folding
Worksheet 16 of 30 (53% complete)

Question 1

A square paper has its top-right corner folded to center. A hole is punched through the folded corner. What appears when unfolded?

Corner Fold Solution:

Step 1 - Understanding Corner Folds:
- Type: Corner-to-point fold
- Description: top-right corner folded to center
- Creates: 2 layers in triangular region
- Rest of paper: Single layer
- Only the folded region has double layers

Step 2 - Hole Punch:
- Position: punched through the folded corner
- Layers penetrated: 2 (in folded corner region only)
- Single layer regions: unaffected
- Creates 2 holes when unfolded

Step 3 - Unfolding:
- Unfold the corner back to original position
- First hole: Stays at punch location (center)
- Second hole: Appears where corner was originally (top-right)
- Result: Two holes: one at center, one at original corner position

Corner Fold Tips:
- Corner folds create partial overlap (not full paper)
- Only the folded region has double layers
- Useful for creating specific hole positions
- Common in origami and paper design

Question 2

A paper is folded horizontally, then diagonally from top-left to bottom-right. A hole is punched at the center of the final triangular shape. What is the unfolded pattern?

Advanced Multi-Directional Fold Solution:

Step 1 - Complex Fold Analysis:
- Sequence: horizontally, then diagonally from top-left to bottom-right
- Creates: 4 layers but with mixed symmetry types
- Symmetry axes: one horizontal, one diagonal

Step 2 - Layer Count Calculation:
- First fold (horizontal): 2 layers
- Second fold (diagonal): folds triangular region
- Final layer count in punched region: 4 layers

Step 3 - Symmetry Combination:
- Horizontal fold: creates vertical reflection symmetry
- Diagonal fold: creates diagonal reflection symmetry
- Combined: creates complex symmetry pattern

Step 4 - Final Pattern:
- Four holes total
- Arranged in two pairs
- Each pair symmetric about a different axis
- Result: Four holes: two pairs forming symmetrical pattern

Advanced Insight: Mixed fold directions create more complex symmetries than simple grid patterns.

Question 3

A square paper is folded 1/3 from left edge toward right. A hole is punched in the overlapping section. What is the pattern when unfolded?

Competition-Level Asymmetric Folding Solution:

Step 1 - Asymmetric Fold Analysis:
- Fold: 1/3 from left edge toward right
- This is NOT a center fold
- Creates unequal overlapping regions
- Layer structure: complex partial overlap

Step 2 - Geometric Setup:
- Paper width: 100 units
- Fold line at: x = 33.33 (1/3 from left)
- Left section (0-33.33): single layer
- Middle section (33.33-66.66): double layer (overlap)
- Right section (66.66-100): single layer

Step 3 - Unfolding Result:
- Two holes at asymmetric positions
- Not centered symmetry
- Result: Two holes asymmetrically positioned

Competition Insight: Asymmetric folds break the simple 2^n pattern and require careful region-by-region analysis.

Question 4

A rectangular paper is folded in Z-pattern (two parallel horizontal folds creating three sections). A single hole is punched at the center of the Z-folded paper. What is the unfolded pattern?

Z-Fold/Accordion Fold Solution:

Step 1 - Understanding Z-Folds:
- Type: Accordion or Z-pattern fold
- Description: folded in Z-pattern (two parallel horizontal folds creating three sections)
- Creates: 3 layers (not 2^n pattern!)
- Special characteristic: Parallel folds, not perpendicular
- Layer structure: Sequential stacking

Step 2 - Z-Fold Execution:
- First fold: Creates 2 layers in one section
- Second fold: Parallel to first, creates 3rd layer
- Result: Stack of 3 aligned layers
- Shape: Compact rectangular stack
- All layers visible from top in folded state

Step 3 - Hole Punch Through Three Layers:
- Position: center of the Z-folded paper
- Penetration: All 3 layers simultaneously
- Key difference: 3 holes, not 2 or 4
- Non-standard fold creates non-power-of-2 result
- Each layer gets hole at same relative position

Step 4 - Unfolding the Z-Pattern:
- Unfold first parallel fold → 2 sections visible
- Unfold second parallel fold → 3 sections visible
- Holes appear in straight line (not symmetric reflection)
- Pattern: Three holes vertically aligned in center column

Z-Fold vs. Standard Fold:
- Standard fold: 2^n layers (2, 4, 8...)
- Z-fold: 3 layers (or 4, 5... if more folds)
- Standard: Symmetry patterns across fold lines
- Z-fold: Linear patterns along fold direction

Question 5

A paper when unfolded shows four holes in a square arrangement at the center. What folding was done before the single hole punch?

Reverse Engineering Solution:

Step 1 - Reverse Problem Approach:
- Given: Final unfolded pattern
- Find: Folding sequence used
- Strategy: Work backwards from result
- Difficulty: Requires pattern recognition and process reconstruction

Step 2 - Pattern Analysis:
- Given pattern: four holes in a square arrangement at the center
- Hole count: 4
- Arrangement: square at center
- Symmetry: horizontal and vertical symmetry
- Hole positions: corners of a centered square

Step 3 - Hole Count Formula:
- Basic formula: holes = punches × 2^folds
- Here: 4 holes, assume 1 punch
- So: 4 = 1 × 2^folds ⇒ 2^folds = 4 ⇒ folds = 2
- Conclusion: 2 folds were used

Step 4 - Symmetry Analysis:
- Identify all symmetry axes in pattern
- Square pattern has: horizontal symmetry, vertical symmetry
- Each symmetry axis suggests one fold
- Two perpendicular symmetry axes = two perpendicular folds

Step 5 - Fold Sequence Reconstruction:
- Number of folds: 2
- Type of folds: perpendicular (horizontal and vertical)
- Order: could be horizontal then vertical, or vertical then horizontal
- Punch location: center (to create centered pattern)
- Result: Folded horizontally, then vertically (or vice versa) before punching center

Key Principles:
- Holes = punches × 2^folds
- Each fold adds a symmetry axis
- Pattern shape reveals fold directions
- Punch location determines pattern center

Question 6

A square sheet of paper is folded horizontal (top to bottom). A hole is punched at the center of folded paper. When unfolded, what pattern will appear?

Step-by-Step Solution:

Step 1 - Initial Analysis:
- Starting with a square paper (transparent sheet)
- Performing a horizontal (top to bottom) fold
- This creates 2 layers of paper stacked vertically

Step 2 - Understanding the Fold:
- A horizontal fold creates a mirror line across the middle
- Any hole punched will appear on both layers
- The symmetry axis is horizontal, but hole alignment becomes vertical

Step 3 - Hole Punch Visualization:
- Hole location: center of folded paper
- When punched, it goes through both layers simultaneously
- Each layer will have the hole at the same relative position from the fold

Step 4 - Mental Unfolding:
- Unfold the paper back to original position
- The hole on the top layer stays in place (center)
- The hole on the bottom layer mirrors across the fold line
- Result: Two holes vertically aligned in the center

Step 5 - Verification:
- Check symmetry: Holes should be mirror images across horizontal center line
- Count: Single punch through 2 layers = 2 holes when unfolded
- Pattern matches: Two holes vertically aligned in the center

Mental Visualization Tip: Imagine tracing the fold line and reflecting the hole position across it like a mirror reflection.

Common Mistake to Avoid: Don't confuse horizontal and vertical fold patterns - horizontal folds create vertical symmetry in hole patterns.

Question 7

A paper is folded in half vertically, then horizontally. Then a small triangle cut from the folded corner. What pattern appears when unfolded?

Advanced Cutting Pattern Solution:

Step 1 - Cutting vs Punching Difference:
- Cutting removes paper material
- Creates negative space (holes) rather than positive marks
- Shape of cut is preserved through unfolding
- Multiple layers cut simultaneously

Step 2 - Fold Analysis:
- Sequence: folded in half vertically, then horizontally
- Creates 4 layers stacked at corner
- All layers perfectly aligned
- Cut from folded corner affects all 4 layers

Step 3 - Pattern Emergence:
- Four triangular notches oriented inward
- Meeting at the center
- Forming a square opening
- Result: Four triangular notches at the center, forming a square hole

Key Insight: Cutting through folded layers creates complex negative space patterns that are different from hole punch patterns.

Question 8

A paper is folded horizontally, then diagonally from top-left to bottom-right. A hole is punched at the center of the final triangular shape. What is the unfolded pattern?

Advanced Multi-Directional Fold Solution:

Step 1 - Complex Fold Analysis:
- Sequence: horizontally, then diagonally from top-left to bottom-right
- Creates: 4 layers but with mixed symmetry types
- Symmetry axes: one horizontal, one diagonal

Step 2 - Layer Count Calculation:
- First fold (horizontal): 2 layers
- Second fold (diagonal): folds triangular region
- Final layer count in punched region: 4 layers

Step 3 - Symmetry Combination:
- Horizontal fold: creates vertical reflection symmetry
- Diagonal fold: creates diagonal reflection symmetry
- Combined: creates complex symmetry pattern

Step 4 - Final Pattern:
- Four holes total
- Arranged in two pairs
- Each pair symmetric about a different axis
- Result: Four holes: two pairs forming symmetrical pattern

Advanced Insight: Mixed fold directions create more complex symmetries than simple grid patterns.

Question 9

A sheet of paper is folded first horizontally (top to bottom), then vertically (left to right). A single hole is punched at the center of the final folded square. Determine the pattern when completely unfolded.

Comprehensive Multi-Fold Solution:

Step 1 - Understanding Double Folds:
- Sequence: first horizontally (top to bottom), then vertically (left to right)
- Creates: 4 layers total (2 × 2)
- Layer structure: Quartered paper with all quarters stacked
- Symmetry: Both horizontal and vertical axes

Step 2 - Layer-by-Layer Analysis:
- First fold (horizontal): 2 layers - top and bottom
- Second fold (vertical): Each of 2 layers folds to create 2 more → 4 total
- Final stack: All 4 quarters perfectly aligned
- Punch location: center of final folded square

Step 3 - Hole Multiplication Mathematics:
- Single punch through 4 layers = 4 holes when unfolded
- Pattern determined by fold symmetry
- Horizontal fold: creates vertical symmetry (y-axis reflection)
- Vertical fold: creates horizontal symmetry (x-axis reflection)
- Combined: creates both symmetries (quarter-turn symmetry)

Step 4 - Final Positions:
- Hole 1: (25,25) - top-left region
- Hole 2: (75,25) - top-right region
- Hole 3: (25,75) - bottom-left region
- Hole 4: (75,75) - bottom-right region

Step 5 - Pattern Recognition:
- Four holes form square pattern
- Centered around paper center
- Equal spacing from center
- Perfect quarter-turn symmetry
- Result: Four holes in a square pattern around the center

Advanced Insight: For n perpendicular folds, single punch creates 2^n holes in grid pattern.

Verification: Count confirms 2² = 4 holes for 2 folds.

Question 10

A rectangular paper is folded in Z-pattern (two parallel horizontal folds creating three sections). A single hole is punched at the center of the Z-folded paper. What is the unfolded pattern?

Z-Fold/Accordion Fold Solution:

Step 1 - Understanding Z-Folds:
- Type: Accordion or Z-pattern fold
- Description: folded in Z-pattern (two parallel horizontal folds creating three sections)
- Creates: 3 layers (not 2^n pattern!)
- Special characteristic: Parallel folds, not perpendicular
- Layer structure: Sequential stacking

Step 2 - Z-Fold Execution:
- First fold: Creates 2 layers in one section
- Second fold: Parallel to first, creates 3rd layer
- Result: Stack of 3 aligned layers
- Shape: Compact rectangular stack
- All layers visible from top in folded state

Step 3 - Hole Punch Through Three Layers:
- Position: center of the Z-folded paper
- Penetration: All 3 layers simultaneously
- Key difference: 3 holes, not 2 or 4
- Non-standard fold creates non-power-of-2 result
- Each layer gets hole at same relative position

Step 4 - Unfolding the Z-Pattern:
- Unfold first parallel fold → 2 sections visible
- Unfold second parallel fold → 3 sections visible
- Holes appear in straight line (not symmetric reflection)
- Pattern: Three holes vertically aligned in center column

Z-Fold vs. Standard Fold:
- Standard fold: 2^n layers (2, 4, 8...)
- Z-fold: 3 layers (or 4, 5... if more folds)
- Standard: Symmetry patterns across fold lines
- Z-fold: Linear patterns along fold direction

Question 11

A square paper is folded 1/3 from left edge toward right. A hole is punched in the overlapping section. What is the pattern when unfolded?

Competition-Level Asymmetric Folding Solution:

Step 1 - Asymmetric Fold Analysis:
- Fold: 1/3 from left edge toward right
- This is NOT a center fold
- Creates unequal overlapping regions
- Layer structure: complex partial overlap

Step 2 - Geometric Setup:
- Paper width: 100 units
- Fold line at: x = 33.33 (1/3 from left)
- Left section (0-33.33): single layer
- Middle section (33.33-66.66): double layer (overlap)
- Right section (66.66-100): single layer

Step 3 - Unfolding Result:
- Two holes at asymmetric positions
- Not centered symmetry
- Result: Two holes asymmetrically positioned

Competition Insight: Asymmetric folds break the simple 2^n pattern and require careful region-by-region analysis.

Question 12

A paper is folded in half vertically, then horizontally. Then a small triangle cut from the folded corner. What pattern appears when unfolded?

Advanced Cutting Pattern Solution:

Step 1 - Cutting vs Punching Difference:
- Cutting removes paper material
- Creates negative space (holes) rather than positive marks
- Shape of cut is preserved through unfolding
- Multiple layers cut simultaneously

Step 2 - Fold Analysis:
- Sequence: folded in half vertically, then horizontally
- Creates 4 layers stacked at corner
- All layers perfectly aligned
- Cut from folded corner affects all 4 layers

Step 3 - Pattern Emergence:
- Four triangular notches oriented inward
- Meeting at the center
- Forming a square opening
- Result: Four triangular notches at the center, forming a square hole

Key Insight: Cutting through folded layers creates complex negative space patterns that are different from hole punch patterns.

Question 13

Consider two identical square papers placed with 50% overlap. A hole is punched through the overlapping region. What happens to each paper?

Partial Overlap Advanced Solution:

Step 1 - Multiple Paper Analysis:
- Setup: two identical square papers placed with 50% overlap
- Type: Multiple separate papers (not single paper folded)
- Complexity: Partial overlap requires position tracking
- Key: Each paper is independent
- Overlap: 50% area overlap

Step 2 - Punch Position Analysis:
- Hole location: punched through the overlapping region
- Which papers penetrated: Both papers in overlap area
- Position on each paper: Different coordinates for each paper
- Important: The punch goes through both papers simultaneously

Step 3 - Per-Paper Analysis:
Paper 1 (bottom):
- Hole location on this paper: In the right half (overlap region)
- Position relative to paper edges: Specific coordinates in Paper 1's system

Paper 2 (top):
- Hole location on this paper: In the left half (overlap region)
- Position relative to paper edges: Different coordinates in Paper 2's system
- The same physical punch creates holes in different positions on each paper

Step 4 - Final Result:
- Separate all papers
- Each paper shows: 1 hole (punch goes through once per paper)
- Position varies: Based on where paper was during punch
- Both holes in the region that was overlapping
- Result: Two holes: both in the overlapping area of respective papers

Multiple Papers vs. Folded Paper:
- Folded paper: Holes symmetric, same paper
- Multiple papers: Holes at different positions, different papers
- Folded: 2^n holes on one paper
- Multiple: 1 hole per paper (n papers = n holes total)

Question 14

A paper is folded in half vertically, then horizontally. Then a small triangle cut from the folded corner. What pattern appears when unfolded?

Advanced Cutting Pattern Solution:

Step 1 - Cutting vs Punching Difference:
- Cutting removes paper material
- Creates negative space (holes) rather than positive marks
- Shape of cut is preserved through unfolding
- Multiple layers cut simultaneously

Step 2 - Fold Analysis:
- Sequence: folded in half vertically, then horizontally
- Creates 4 layers stacked at corner
- All layers perfectly aligned
- Cut from folded corner affects all 4 layers

Step 3 - Pattern Emergence:
- Four triangular notches oriented inward
- Meeting at the center
- Forming a square opening
- Result: Four triangular notches at the center, forming a square hole

Key Insight: Cutting through folded layers creates complex negative space patterns that are different from hole punch patterns.

Question 15

A transparent sheet is folded vertical (right to left). A single hole is punched at the center of the folded edge. How will the paper look when unfolded?

Complete Solution with Visualization:

Step 1 - Paper Configuration:
- Square paper folded vertically right to left
- Right half folds over left half
- Creates 2-layer structure with vertical symmetry

Step 2 - Geometric Relationships:
- Fold line: vertical center line
- Symmetry: Left-right reflection
- Layer alignment: Perfect overlap

Step 3 - Punch Position Analysis:
- Location: center of the folded edge
- In folded state: at the physical edge center
- Important: This is actually the original center line
- Punch affects both layers identically

Step 4 - Unfolding Transformation:
- Unfold right half back to original position
- Hole on right half stays at center line
- Hole on left half mirrors to same position (center line overlap)
- Result: Two holes close together near vertical center line

Step 5 - Pattern Analysis:
- Two holes extremely close together
- Both near the vertical center line
- Almost overlapping but technically separate
- Result: Two holes close together near vertical center line

Advanced Insight: When punching exactly at the fold line in folded state, you get two holes that appear very close to each other when unfolded, not at the same spot.

Verification: Test with physical paper to confirm this non-intuitive result.

Question 16

A transparent sheet is folded vertical (right to left). A single hole is punched at the center of the folded edge. How will the paper look when unfolded?

Complete Solution with Visualization:

Step 1 - Paper Configuration:
- Square paper folded vertically right to left
- Right half folds over left half
- Creates 2-layer structure with vertical symmetry

Step 2 - Geometric Relationships:
- Fold line: vertical center line
- Symmetry: Left-right reflection
- Layer alignment: Perfect overlap

Step 3 - Punch Position Analysis:
- Location: center of the folded edge
- In folded state: at the physical edge center
- Important: This is actually the original center line
- Punch affects both layers identically

Step 4 - Unfolding Transformation:
- Unfold right half back to original position
- Hole on right half stays at center line
- Hole on left half mirrors to same position (center line overlap)
- Result: Two holes close together near vertical center line

Step 5 - Pattern Analysis:
- Two holes extremely close together
- Both near the vertical center line
- Almost overlapping but technically separate
- Result: Two holes close together near vertical center line

Advanced Insight: When punching exactly at the fold line in folded state, you get two holes that appear very close to each other when unfolded, not at the same spot.

Verification: Test with physical paper to confirm this non-intuitive result.

Question 17

A square paper is folded diagonally from top-left to bottom-right. A hole is punched near the center of folded triangle. What pattern appears when unfolded?

Detailed Step-by-Step Solution:

Step 1 - Understanding Diagonal Folds:
- Diagonal folds create 45-degree symmetry
- The fold line runs corner to corner (top-left to bottom-right)
- Creates a triangular shape with 2 layers
- Fold direction: diagonally from top-left to bottom-right

Step 2 - Geometric Analysis:
- Original: Square with 4 corners
- After fold: Triangle with 3 visible corners
- Hidden corner: Bottom-right under folded layers
- Symmetry axis: Diagonal line at 45° from top-left to bottom-right
- Layer structure: 2 overlapping triangular layers

Step 3 - Hole Punch Location:
- Position: near the center of folded triangle
- Coordinate mapping: (45,55) in 100x100 coordinate system
- Penetration: Through both triangular layers
- Important: Position relative to diagonal symmetry axis

Step 4 - Mental Unfolding Technique:
- Keep one triangular layer fixed (bottom layer)
- Rotate the other layer 180° around diagonal axis
- The hole on the moving layer traces to its symmetric position
- Use coordinate transformation: (x,y) → (y,x) for this diagonal
- Result: Two holes diagonally symmetric across the diagonal

Step 5 - Pattern Recognition:
- Diagonal symmetry creates diagonal hole pattern
- Both holes equidistant from diagonal fold line
- Perpendicular distance from fold is equal for both holes
- Visual pattern: Two holes symmetric about the main diagonal
- Final answer: Two holes diagonally symmetric across the diagonal

Pro Visualization Tip:
Imagine the paper as a book cover. When you open it (unfold), the mark on one side appears mirrored on the other side across the spine (fold line).

Advanced Technique:
For diagonal folds, use coordinate geometry. If the hole is at position (x, y) on the folded triangle, the symmetric hole appears at position (y, x) when unfolded across the diagonal.

Common Pitfall: Don't confuse diagonal symmetry with horizontal/vertical symmetry. Diagonal folds at 45° create patterns along that diagonal axis, not along the edges.

Coordinate Verification:
Original hole: (45,55)
Mirror hole: (55,45) [for top-left to bottom-right diagonal]
Check symmetry: Both equidistant from line y=x

Question 18

A transparent sheet is folded vertical (right to left). A single hole is punched at the center of the folded edge. How will the paper look when unfolded?

Complete Solution with Visualization:

Step 1 - Paper Configuration:
- Square paper folded vertically right to left
- Right half folds over left half
- Creates 2-layer structure with vertical symmetry

Step 2 - Geometric Relationships:
- Fold line: vertical center line
- Symmetry: Left-right reflection
- Layer alignment: Perfect overlap

Step 3 - Punch Position Analysis:
- Location: center of the folded edge
- In folded state: at the physical edge center
- Important: This is actually the original center line
- Punch affects both layers identically

Step 4 - Unfolding Transformation:
- Unfold right half back to original position
- Hole on right half stays at center line
- Hole on left half mirrors to same position (center line overlap)
- Result: Two holes close together near vertical center line

Step 5 - Pattern Analysis:
- Two holes extremely close together
- Both near the vertical center line
- Almost overlapping but technically separate
- Result: Two holes close together near vertical center line

Advanced Insight: When punching exactly at the fold line in folded state, you get two holes that appear very close to each other when unfolded, not at the same spot.

Verification: Test with physical paper to confirm this non-intuitive result.

Question 19

A square paper is folded 1/3 from left edge toward right. A hole is punched in the overlapping section. What is the pattern when unfolded?

Competition-Level Asymmetric Folding Solution:

Step 1 - Asymmetric Fold Analysis:
- Fold: 1/3 from left edge toward right
- This is NOT a center fold
- Creates unequal overlapping regions
- Layer structure: complex partial overlap

Step 2 - Geometric Setup:
- Paper width: 100 units
- Fold line at: x = 33.33 (1/3 from left)
- Left section (0-33.33): single layer
- Middle section (33.33-66.66): double layer (overlap)
- Right section (66.66-100): single layer

Step 3 - Unfolding Result:
- Two holes at asymmetric positions
- Not centered symmetry
- Result: Two holes asymmetrically positioned

Competition Insight: Asymmetric folds break the simple 2^n pattern and require careful region-by-region analysis.

Question 20

A square paper is folded 1/3 from left edge toward right. A hole is punched in the overlapping section. What is the pattern when unfolded?

Competition-Level Asymmetric Folding Solution:

Step 1 - Asymmetric Fold Analysis:
- Fold: 1/3 from left edge toward right
- This is NOT a center fold
- Creates unequal overlapping regions
- Layer structure: complex partial overlap

Step 2 - Geometric Setup:
- Paper width: 100 units
- Fold line at: x = 33.33 (1/3 from left)
- Left section (0-33.33): single layer
- Middle section (33.33-66.66): double layer (overlap)
- Right section (66.66-100): single layer

Step 3 - Unfolding Result:
- Two holes at asymmetric positions
- Not centered symmetry
- Result: Two holes asymmetrically positioned

Competition Insight: Asymmetric folds break the simple 2^n pattern and require careful region-by-region analysis.
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