Later in the Summer, the Toyota City Junior Marching Band will be travelling to the UK to perform at Music in the Park at Maurice Lea Park on 9 August. Japan Fest at Swadlincote’s Festival of Leisure is one of the public events in the programme. The Board is staging a programme of events to mark the 25 th Anniversary, aiming to raise awareness of the international links, and promote relationships that will enhance economic development, tourism, culture, sport and the environment. ![]() South Derbyshire District Council is one of the partners in the Toyota City Partnership Board, which was established in 2018, to develop the friendship with Toyota City by bringing together key economic and cultural stakeholders, alongside the Derbyshire local authorities. The Festival of Leisure featuring Japan Fest will run from June 24 to 25, between 11.30am and 5pm on both days. Stallholders will be offering Japanese anime, artwork, crafts, stationary, clothing, sweets, food and drink. Visitors will enjoy performers and activities, including musicians, DJs, singers, and drummers, and can try face painting, Sumo wrestling, making origami, wearing a Kimono or taking part in a Pokemon Switch tournament. READ MORE: Mum wants apology for son who stabbed Burton butcher to death in random attack The aim is to cater both to the Japanese community and to create an environment where anyone, no matter the age, can enjoy a day immersed in a culture which otherwise would be near impossible to engage with. The event is part of celebrations to mark the 25th anniversary of the international relationship between Derbyshire and Toyota City in Japan, which was established following the development of the car plant at Burnaston. Activities for this cultural event will include Japanese arts and crafts, authentic handmade food, Japanese inspired drinks, performances, activity areas and anime, plus much more. Japan Fest will bring a unique taste of Japan to South Derbyshire. UPDATE: I now have a video version of this tutorial right here! It’s not exactly the same method (the video shows a simpler version), but it leads to the same result.A celebration of Japanese culture with performances, workshops and stalls will take place at this year’s Swadlincote Festival of Leisure. You’re done! Now find a book to use it with! Take the top layer and bend it over and inside so that it goes around those two side flaps and against the bottom layer of paper.įinish tucking it in and smooth the model with your fingers. Let the top triangle that you folded upwards six steps ago come down as well, as shown.įlatten the model again, with the two side flaps of paper now on the inside. Reverse the fold lines you made when you folded those two triangles up and fold them to the inside of the model. Open up the paper slightly, so that you are looking into the inside of the model. There will be only one layer of paper left at the bottom now.įold the two smaller triangles down again. You’ll see two smaller triangles now sticking out below it. ![]() Start collapsing it into a bird base, as we learned in the Origami crane tutorial.įold the top layer of paper up to the tip. Rotate the paper so that it is diamond-shaped, as shown. Let’s get started, shall we?įold it in half diagonally the other way, and unfold. You won’t need much to fold this bookmark: only a single square of paper. But not just any bookmark – you can use your till slip or bus ticket for that – a bookmark that slips around the corner of your book’s pages. Today’s tutorial is quick and easy: an origami bookmark. Yes, I am just doing this mock complaining thing for faux sympathy! On top of that, my third-party blogging program just decided to go on strike today – after I finished writing the post. ![]() Sorry for the long absence of tutorials! Life just took over and I had a million things to do/read/write.
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