Description
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Visual Dispersion (Mechanical): The design exhibits “Aqueous Scumble-Mottling Dispersion.” The background pigments are dispersed as if applied with a wet-on-wet sponge or a wide dry-brush, creating a “shattered” or “mottled” surface quality. This provides a tactile “sandpaper” aesthetic where color density is intentionally broken by the “tooth” of the stroke, mimicking the natural sedimentation of mineral dyes onto a porous substrate.
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Pigment Dispersion (Zonal): The design features “Crystalline Linear Graduation.” Dispersion is strictly organized by “materiality.” The obsidian grains exhibit maximum, opaque saturation, immediately transitioning to a “granular” lower density in the surrounding lapis and amethyst transition zones, mimicking the physical movement of heavy pigments meeting a high-moisture mineral surface.
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Edge Dispersion (Sharp-to-Grit): The boundaries of the forms feature a “Defined Transition.” While the primary “grain pulses” maintain a sharp graphic path to define the specimen, the surrounding background application utilizes a “frayed” or “scumbled” texture at the perimeters, ensuring the motifs feel hand-rendered rather than mechanically generated.














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