What is a flexagon?
A flexagon is a flat geometric form, folded from a simple strip of paper, that can be “flexed” — pinched and opened — to reveal faces that were hidden inside. Watch it change:
A little history
Flexagons were discovered in 1939 by Arthur H. Stone, a British mathematics student at Princeton, who began folding the trimmed edges of his American paper and noticed the shape could turn “inside out” to show new faces. They were made famous by Martin Gardner, whose very first column for Scientific American was about the hexaflexagon. Hexaflexagons come in many varieties, distinguished by how many faces can be revealed by flexing the assembled figure.
How it is made
A strip of equilateral triangles, folded and joined, becomes a hexagon with hidden faces.
Why it is our name
It is how we think about fund structuring: one regulated platform, refolded around each strategy. A UCITS today, an AIF or a NAIF tomorrow, a segregated MiFID mandate alongside — the same expertise and the same governance, configured to show exactly the face your fund needs. Nothing is rebuilt from scratch; the structure flexes.