Description
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Visual Dispersion (Granular): The primary foliage color zones exhibit “Granular Dispersion”. The pigments are dispersed as fine, stippled dots rather than smooth washes, providing a tactile, “sand-blasted” surface quality that suggests traditional printing techniques.
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Pigment Dispersion (Atmospheric): The background features “Atmospheric Tonal Bleeding”. The blue and ochre pigments in the field are dispersed in soft, uneven “clouds” that merge without defined borders, creating a sense of immense soft-focus depth behind the textured leaves.
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Edge Dispersion (Fractured): The boundaries of the leaf forms feature “Fractured Edge Dispersion”. Instead of crisp outlines, the edges are broken and porous, allowing the background colors to “seep” through the foliage silhouettes, ensuring the movement feels spontaneous and weathered.















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