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Master Crane Operators
Project type
1500 Paper Crane Origami Exhibit
Date
April 2024
Location
Clark Centre for the Arts, Toronto
The Making of 1000 Cranes: Chasing Hope, Happiness and Healing
Written By: Coco Woo (BIST member)
The making of 1000 cranes was an arts project conceived and spearheaded by Ms. Mathew.
HISTORY OF ORIGAMI CRANE MAKING:
According to Japanese tradition, folding 1000 paper cranes gives you a chance to make one special wish come true.
In some variations of the tradition, you may be granted happiness and eternal good luck, instead of just one wish such as long life or recovery from illness or injury.
The making of cranes is suitable for people who have no prior experience with origami.
THE 1000 PAPER CRANES INSTALLATION:
24 strings of assorted colour and patterned cranes (35 on each string) were hung on a wooden frame that was made and generously donated by Dull Genius Design.
BIST members and staff, their family and friends spent numerous hours making the 1,000+ cranes at the BIST office during Freaky Friday sessions and in the community (e.g., homes, public libraries, coffee shops, doctors’ waiting rooms).
An assembly line was formed with some members folding the squares, and others tackling the final folds and stringing together the cranes.
The strings of cranes were attached to two sides of the wooden frame.
OUTCOMES:
In folding 1,000+ cranes, we experienced a roller coaster of emoti
Joy in learning a paper craft
Renewed confidence in successfully exercising our fine motor skills (Some people who have brain injuries experience challenges using fine motor skills. Crane folding offers an opportunity to relearn or practise these skill
Frustration when the paper tore, the string would not easily thread through the needle; the string became tangled;
Elation when we successfully threaded the cranes together with string, needle, and pearls; and
Conversations between mother and teen child when folding cranes at the kitchen table.
LESSONS LEARNED
Folding pieces of paper into cranes can be incorporated into one’s mindfulness practices.
Folding cranes provides an opportunity to practise fine motor skills.
Folding the entire crane can be more satisfying for some people than participating in an assembly line to fold the cranes.
One’s patience can be taxed when folding 1000 paper cranes and stringing them together (e.g., refolding the paper when it was folded incorrectly, threading the needle through a plastic string, untangling the string of cranes)
Overall, the project fostered among people who made the cranes and strung them together:
community building;
the opportunity to use fine motor skills;
patience with self and others as we learned how to fold the cranes;
co-operation as we helped one another learn how to fold cranes and string together the finished cranes; and
feelings of personal satisfaction in learning a new type of art.















