The question often asked nowadays is what value is left in a one-dollar bill?

A Chinese-American named Won Park has found the answer.

View the pictures below and you will understand what is meant. The technique applied is called Origami and is the traditional Japanese art of paper folding. The objective of this art is to create an image of an object using geometric folds and crease patterns if achievable without the use of gluing or cutting the paper, and using only one piece of paper for each figure.

Won Park has a master’s degree in Origami.  He is also called the “money folder”, a practitioner of origami whose “canvas” is the US one-dollar bill.

Bending, twisting, and folding, he creates life-like shapes in stunning detail.

Quite amazing …

One-dollar Fish

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One-dollar Butterfly

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One-dollar Camera

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Two-dollar Battle Tank

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Two-dollar Chinese Dragon

One-dollar Crab

Two-dollar Jacket

Two-dollar Spider

One-dollar Scorpion

One-dollar Toilet Bowl

One-dollar Penguin

One-dollar Shark

One-dollar Jet

One-dollar Hammerhead Shark

Source: Now Public, November 16, 2009.