
Notice, can you find this goblet below, is there anything special about it?
In fact, as long as you zoom in, you can find the secrets hidden in it. That is, the cup in the hand is actually carved from paper.
Whether the lower plane or the 3D silly is not clear.
Carving a blank piece of paper into a glass, this wonderful piece comes from a Japanese girl named Souma. With a pair of magic hands, she has made a lot of three-dimensional paper carvings that can be faked and real. And because of these naked-eye 3D works, they have caught fire on the Internet.
There are many similar creations that make people shoot amazing cases.
For example, the following one is still a plain white paper, but it is carved out of the effect of light and shadow and water patterns. In the shot, she holds a glass of ice water in her hand, and at a glance, the ice ballast on the glass can be called fake.
This one looks like holding a glass ready to drink.
This bottle of mineral water filled with water can also see the water droplets and reflections on the wall of the bottle.
Of course, after drinking empty, you can twist it to become another work, how is it possible.
As a "white paper princess" who has been accompanied by paper carving for many years, all her works come from a knife, a piece of paper, and a pair of hands. It seems simple, but it can always deceive everyone's eyeballs.
In fact, paper carving originated from China's Han Dynasty. Until the middle of the 18th century, a large number of paper carving artists who loved to create emerged in Europe, who changed and created on the basis of traditional paper carving, and the three mainstream schools of Cubism, Experimental School and Engraving Paper Sculpture appeared.
Souma's work belongs to the genre of three-dimensional paper carving. We can see different shades of white in her work, which is through the thinness of the paper to create a light and shadow scene, so that we can get a pseudo-3D effect visually.
Making light and shadow effects is not to add to the paper, but to subtract. According to the engraving knife, scratch different degrees of shades on the paper, create a full cutout or semi-skeleton to create a light and shadow atmosphere.
And all of her paper sculptures we see, although very complex and uneven, are actually all from the same piece of unplacked paper.
Like most little girls who love dreams and fairy tales, Souma's more paper sculptures carry an immortal romantic glow.
Flowers are the inspiration for many of her works. The tower and the rose collide with the romance of metal.
The crown decorated with flowers shows the princess dream on the paper.
In the meticulous composition, it is a garden that only fairy tales have.
Flowing water and night cherry blossoms, quiet and gentle.
Cats and flowers are like fantasy worlds in bedtime stories.
In the evening in the fields, the flower fields are in full bloom.
Geisha and cherry blossoms. The combination of girls and flowers highlights the double beauty.
The youthful combination of a girl and a sunflower is also a favorite expression of Souma.
Feathers, on the other hand, are another preference of Souma. The feathers in her works are light and agile, and different works represent different meanings.
A work called "Sacred Fire" that gathers feathers into a ball of fire.
Write the prologue with a combination of a quill pen and parchment.
The crown decorated with feathers shows pride in refinement.
Dancing Girl and Fluttering Feathers, Souma named the work Freedom.
In fact, in recent years, Souma has held many personal paper sculpture exhibitions. The works exhibited leave the simplicity of white paper and metamorphose into gorgeous beauty.
In her eyes, the white paper sculpture world can be matched with different colored background boards to create different worlds. For example, if you change to red, you can simulate sunlight, and the hollowed-out paper sculpture can also bloom the warmth of the sunset.
This wonderful world of paper carving is not the mainstream culture that is widely familiar to the public, and there are not many people who pay attention to it, so Miss Souma also recorded the steps and techniques of carving, carefully explained, and wanted everyone to try this interesting activity.
I looked at these three-dimensional paper carvings, and the most exciting thing was to turn white paper into diamonds, and I thought it was not impossible to try it with my hands.
Although the composition, creation and knife work, I do not have the same, but the courage to dream is still there, and it is very large.