I'm not sure I understand your question.
I can turn a verb into a noun by taking the infinitive form and adding "das". This noun describes the act of doing something. These nouns typically don't have a plural, because the act of doing something is abstract and can't have a plural.
gehen -> das Gehen = going
springen -> das Springen = jumping
weben -> das Weben = weaving
leben -> das Leben (no plural) = living
Additionally, there are nouns that derive from a verb, with all sorts of genders (i.e. articles). These sometimes change the stem vowel, sometimes they don't. They often have plural forms.
gehen -> der Gang | die Gänge = the walk | walks
springen -> der Sprung | die Sprünge = the jump | jumps
weben -> die Webe | die Weben = the weave | weaves
leben -> das Leben | die Leben = the life | lives
These are different constructions, not "nouns constructed with 'das' in the same way". Even if the article is "das" and the form is the same in both cases.
Your last example exhibits these two constructions, this time with a different gender, and a slightly different form:
falten -> das Falten = folding (the act)
falten -> die Falte | die Falten = the fold, the crease | folds, creases