Description
In the context of these images, Dispersion refers to Micro-Stippled Mottling and Crystalline Zonal Saturation.
-
Visual Dispersion (Mechanical): Both designs exhibit “Micro-Stippled Mottling.” The pigments are dispersed with extreme precision to mimic the individual knots of a Silk-Kerman or Tabriz carpet. This provides a tactile “grainy” surface quality where the color density is 100% consistent across micro-nodes, ensuring no “bleed” between the complex avian details and the deep lapis background.
-
Pigment Dispersion (Zonal): The designs feature “High-Contrast Zonal Saturation.” Dispersion is strictly organized by “Ornamental Logic.”
-
In the FRONT, the Solar-Amber and Ruby-Red tones exist in a state of maximum saturation to define the “scaffolding” of the flowering trees.
-
In the DUPATTA, the Lapis-Blue field utilizes a “low-density” mottled dispersion to mimic the depth of night sky or hand-dyed wool, allowing the central Amber medallion to maintain maximum visual weight.
-
-
Edge Dispersion (Razor-to-Etched): The boundaries of the forms feature a “Defined Transition.” Every leaf, bird, and architectural scallop is defined by a razor-sharp graphic path, mimicking the look of fine-line metal etching or laser-printing on high-grade textile fibers.












Reviews
There are no reviews yet.