Description
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Visual Dispersion: The forms of the flowers are not contained; they are “dispersed” or scattered violently across the dark background. Instead of soft fading (like watercolor), the dispersion here is sharp and chaotic. It looks like the visual data is breaking apart or the paint is flaking off.
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Texture Dispersion (Dry Brush): Technically, this mimics a “Dry Brush” dispersion effect. This happens when a brush has very little paint and is dragged over a rough surface. The paint doesn’t cover the area solidly; it disperses into tiny, broken specks and jagged lines, revealing the dark background underneath.
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Design Intent: This type of high-dispersion, high-contrast texture is often used to mask the repetition in a seamless pattern, making the fabric look like one continuous, chaotic art piece rather than a repeating tile.













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