Description
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Visual Dispersion (Mechanical): The design exhibits “Hatch-Line Dispersion”. The pigments are dispersed through fine, parallel “stroke-points” characteristic of Classical Engraving or Lithography. This provides a tactile, “paper-grain” surface quality where the color appears to be part of the fiber rather than sitting on top of it.
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Pigment Dispersion (Zonal): The design features “Desaturated Zonal Graduation”. Within the copper and blue leaves, the color is dispersed in varying “opacities”—from the dense, etched centers to the light, vaporous “ghosting” at the leaf tips—creating a sense of physical material depth and sun-faded relief.
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Edge Dispersion (Structured-to-Vaporous): The boundaries of the forms feature a “Fibrous Transition”. While the internal hatching provides structure, the outer edges exhibit a vaporous, soft-focus dispersion that mimics the natural bleed of pigment on raw, unprimed paper.











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