Our first larger project involved experimentation with techniques derived from the mat weaving, or plaiting practiced in the South Pacific, a pocket-shaped artefact that we found in the Constance Howard Collection at Goldsmiths College, and polyhedra made of woven paper strips. These techniques can be used with a variety of materials, natural and man-made, as long as they consist of long, essentially flat strips of even width (at least 1:60).
Materials readily available to us meant that we focused on the use of paper strips, most often made by running pastel paper through a shredder.
Making with rigour in this context focused on the mathematical ideas involved in: