Description
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Visual Dispersion (Mottled): The primary foliage forms exhibit “Internal Textural Mottling.” The color is dispersed in uneven, grainy clusters that suggest a “dry-brush” or block-print technique, leaving the underlying background texture visible within the leaf shapes to mimic weathered stone or old parchment.
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Pigment Dispersion (Zonal): The design features “Isolated Zonal Saturation.” Saturated sienna and slate pigments are dispersed in dense pockets within the main forms, immediately surrounded by wide areas of raw background space or highly diluted “ghosted” leaf outlines that provide secondary depth.
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Edge Dispersion (Sharp-to-Fibrillated): The boundaries of the main forms feature “Fibrillated Edge Dispersion,” where the pigment meets the background with a jagged, “rough-hewn” quality. This is contrasted by the “Crisp Linear Dispersion” of the fine stems and skeletal veins, which provide structural definition to the botanical drift.















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