green Origami paper horse

File

License + info

Please Check the original Web

Date

2013-08-31

Source

Colors

View 6238 times seen 557 downloads
green Origami paper horse.

This vector resource includes the following elements:

Paper,Horse,Clouds,Origami,Power,Wind,Protection,Lawn,Boats,Carbon,Environmental,Environmental protection,Low,Low carbon,Paper boats,Wind power,Windmill

 


This vector contains the following main colors: White,Olive Drab,Atlantis,Forest Green,Onahau
Other files that may of interest to you
yellow tiger Tearing the paper in front view
year of golden origami dragon paper
old dark golden fashioned toilet paper pattern with Phoenix and lace
Festival Fu paper cut
chinese year of Origami dragon
happy green dragon on yellow paper over bokeh
the chinese twelve zodiac paper cut
year of origami dragon
brown rockinghorse two versions
rabbit lady holding a little heart on folded paper for note template
horse wiki:
>This article discusses ungulate mammals. For other meanings of horse, see Horse (disambiguation). The Horse (Equus caballus) is a sizeable ungulate mammal, one of the seven modern species of the genus Equus. It has long played an important role in transport, whether ridden or used for pulling vehicles. They are also used for food. Though horses may have been domesticated in one isolated locale in 4500 BC, the unequivocal date of (1) domestication and (2) use as a means of transport dates to no earlier than circa 2000 BC, evidenced by the Sintashta chariot burials (see Domestication of the horse). See more at Wikipedia.org...

Origami wiki:
ami (折り紙 or 折紙 origami "paper folding") is the art of Japanese paper folding. The word literally means "paper folding" in Japanese and refers to all types of paper folding, even those of non-Japanese origin.Origami only uses a small number of different folds, but they can be combined in a variety of ways to make intricate designs. In general, these designs begin with a square sheet of paper, whose sides may be different colors, and proceed without cutting the paper. Contrary to most popular belief, traditional Japanese origami, which has been practiced since the Edo era (1603-1867), has often been less strict about these conventions, sometimes cutting the paper during the creation of the design (Kirigami 切り紙) or starting with a rectangular, circular, or other non-square sheets of paper. See more at Wikipedia.org...


Popular searches