Description
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Visual Dispersion (Mottled): The primary roses exhibit “Internal Pigment Mottling.” The color is dispersed in soft, uneven clusters where the yellow and rose tones bleed into one another, suggesting a “wet-on-wet” watercolor technique that gives each flower a unique, hand-painted volume.
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Pigment Dispersion (Clouding): The background features “Atmospheric Tonal Clouding.” Grey and beige pigments are dispersed in broad, sweeping washes that create “pockets” of light and shadow, making the field feel like a shifting, atmospheric mist rather than a flat surface.
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Edge Dispersion (Vaporous): The boundaries of the main forms feature “Vaporous Boundary Diffusion.” There is a soft, feathered bleed at the margins where the floral color meets the background, ensuring the flora feels completely integrated into the “dreamscape” rather than layered on top.











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