An ingenious cardboard box to use as a cradle for infants, developed by a Peace Corps volunteer who worked in Zambia and a product designer at the University of Michigan. The video shows how the box is assembled.
I can't figure out how the flat, unfolded box package would incorporate the longer piece used for the V-shaped strut. And, remembering my own infants (who slept in dresser drawers for the first few months). http://michigantoday.umich.edu/thinking-inside-the-box/ See also the link to a similar, but non-rocking cardboard box-cradle that's been used in Finland for at least half a century, https://www.babyboxco.com/pages/tradition Karen Karen Reeds, co-ringleader, Princeton Public Library Origami Group Affiliate of Origami USA, http://origamiusa.org/ We usually meet 2nd Wednesday of the month, 6:30-8pm, First Floor, Quiet Room. Free! We provide paper! All welcome! (Kids under 8, please bring a grown-up.) Princeton Public Library info: 609.924.9529 https://princetonlibrary.org/ Celebrating 12 years of paperfolding in Princeton! Our next meeting: WEd. March 14, 2018 from Karen Reeds [email protected]
