Previous
Previous Product Image

Amethyst & Glacial-Slate Luminous Fragment

10.00
Next

Crimson-Quartz & Lapis Kinetic Botanical

10.00
Next Product Image

Lapis & Jade Tectonic Fragment

10.00

  • The Look: The composition utilizes “All-Over Planar Scaffolding.” Set against a luminous ivory-white ground, the forms are defined by sharp, multi-directional perimeters. The use of varied blue and green “shards” acts as a structural “spine,” while the overlapping of translucent teal and deep indigo creates a sense of high-density volumetric relief.

  • Palette: Cool Mineral & Earth Tones: A dominant background of Mineral-Ivory, balanced by Lapis-Blue, Jade-Green, Obsidian-Navy, and Slate-Teal.

  • Key Feature: Friction Scaffolding: Depth is achieved through “Torn-Edge Partitioning”—where the intersection of opaque pigment layers and jagged, high-contrast perimeters creates a physical relief effect, organizing the chaotic pattern into a deep, volumetric environment.

Add to Wishlist
Add to Wishlist
SKU: 056 Categories: , ,
Report Abuse

Description

  • Visual Dispersion (Mechanical): The design exhibits “Aqueous Stencil-Mottling Dispersion.” The pigments are dispersed as if applied in solid, opaque layers that have been weathered or “scratched,” leaving a fine, granular white grit characteristic of Digital Gouache or Distressed Screen-Print. This provides a tactile “sandpaper” surface quality where color density is intentionally broken by a fine-mist “mottling,” mimicking the natural sedimentation of mineral dyes onto a porous mineral surface.

  • Pigment Dispersion (Zonal): The design features “Crystalline Linear Graduation.” Dispersion is strictly organized by “materiality.” The color exists in a state of maximum saturation from edge to edge within each shard, immediately transitioning to zero-saturation at the crisp, ivory boundaries, creating a high-contrast, “vibrating” edge effect.

  • Edge Dispersion (Sharp-to-Grit): The boundaries of the forms feature a “Defined Transition.” While the primary “shards” maintain a sharp graphic path to define the structure, the application of color creates a subtle “grit” or “scumbled” texture at the perimeters, ensuring the motifs feel hand-rendered rather than mechanically vectorised.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Lapis & Jade Tectonic Fragment”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Loading...

Product Enquiry