[list][*]On the website of the [url=http://www.sigd.org/resources/muqarnas/]School of Islamic Geometric Design[/url] you can find lots of materials on the construction of muqarnas and links to other sites.[/*][*]Eric Broug made a nice film on making muqarnas out of [url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GH7N38vX-6I]cardboard[/url].[/*][/list]
[list][*]Thé database of muqarnas with many 2D schemes is the website of [url=http://www.shiro1000.jp/muqarnas/default.htm]Shiro Takahashi[/url].[/*][/list]
[list][*]Very nice is how [url=http://www.henkhietbrink.nl]Henk Hietbrink[/url] illustrates on his website how in workshops he works with a 3D printer, cut-out shapes and a STL viewer to show 3D animations in analysing many examples of muqarnas.[/*][/list]
Getty Publications put the book The Topkapi Scroll - Geometry and Ornament in Islamic Architecture of Gülrü Necipoglu online. You can legally download it at [url=https://www.getty.edu/publications/virtuallibrary/9780892363353.html]Getty Publications[/url]. Besides high quality reproductions of thé historical written source of islamic patterns and muqarnas, you get a standard work that situates the scroll into its historical-cultural-scientifical context.
Who's looking for supplementary mathematical-scientifical information surely will find what he's looking for in some publications, that you can find online as pdf-documents.[br][br][list][*]Don't the dissertation of Silvia Harmsen: [br][url=https://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/volltextserver/7047/]Algorithmic Computer Reconstructions of Stalactite Vaults - Muqarnas - in Islamic Architecture[/url].[br][/*][*]Very interesting too is the work of Yvonne Dold-Samplonius: [br][url=http://www.jphogendijk.nl/arabsci/Dold1.pdf]Practical Arabic Mathematics: Measuring the Muqarnas by al-Kashi[/url][/*][/list]