Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Amrisha Prashar
on 16 October 2015

Origami Wily Werewolf Competition


In March we held a competition that asked participants to create their best version of a Unicorn Origami to celebrate our design theme for the Ubuntu Phone. With the upcoming launch of 15.10, we’d love to see your best version of Wily Werewolf using your Origami skills.

The following pdf can help you design your creations! Instructions Origami Wily Werewolf

Then all you’ll need to do once complete is:
– Take a photo of your design
– Upload to Twitter
– And use the hashtag #OrigamiWerewolf

A member of our design team will judge the best based on creativity, complexity and design. The deadline is 11:59 on Wednesday 28th October and the winner will receive an Ubuntu E5 Phone! Happy creating.

Terms_and_Conditions_Origami_WilyWerewolf

Related posts


Canonical
27 May 2026

Introducing Workshop: launch sandboxed development environments on Ubuntu with a single command

Canonical announcements Canonical News

Developers now benefit from consistency and repeatability for cutting-edge workflows, including agentic AI. Today, Canonical announced the release of Workshop, a solution for launching development environments with a single command. These environments are configured once, and can be reproduced on different machines. This means consistent ...


Youssef Eltoukhy
26 May 2026

Run agentic workloads on Arm and Ubuntu

AI Article

In the lead-up to Ubuntu Summit 26.04, Canonical and Arm are collaborating to certify the new Arm AGI CPU on Ubuntu 26.04 LTS (Resolute Raccoon). Learn what this means for developers and agentic AI. ...


Miguel Divo
22 May 2026

Decoding design: How design and engineering thrive together in open source

Design Design

Open source thrives on engineering-driven processes. Fast feedback loops, terminal tools, Git workflows: they’re the lifeblood of how we build software in the open. But for software to truly excel, we need to create user experiences that empower people to use them. I wanted to bring this conversation into the spotlight as part of Canonica ...