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Sun-Stone & Lapis Taxonomy

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  • The Look: The composition utilizes “Distributed Node Scaffolding.” Set against a brilliant Mineral-White field, the design is organized by vibrant focal clusters: the top features intense carnelian-reds and solar-yellows, while the lower half transitions into soft rose-pinks and saturated cerulean-blues. Fine internal veining and high-contrast charcoal stamen provide a structural “spine” to the lush, aqueous forms.

  • Palette: High-Vibrancy Mineral & Garden Tones: A dominant background of Pure White, balanced by Solar-Yellow, Lapis-Blue, Rose-Pink, and Carnelian-Red.

  • Key Feature: Orbital Scaffolding: Depth is achieved through “Anatomical Scaffolding”—where the central nodes of each flower (the stamen or core) act as the structural anchor, organizing the fluid, bleeding petal edges into a deep, volumetric environment.

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SKU: TD-1100 (72) Categories: ,
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Description

  • Visual Dispersion (Mechanical): The design exhibits “Aqueous Scumble-Mottling Dispersion.” The pigments are dispersed in a combination of smooth, saturated washes and high-friction “dry-brush” accents characteristic of Wet-on-Dry Watercolor. This provides a tactile “velvet” surface quality where color density is intentionally broken at the petal perimeters to mimic natural light refraction, allowing the background white to “vibrate” through the darker tones.

  • Pigment Dispersion (Zonal): The design features “Viscous Zonal Graduation.” Dispersion is strictly organized by the “radial” structure of the flower heads. The color moves from high-density, opaque centers to light, vaporous “washed” ivory and pastel tints at the petal tips, mimicking the natural movement of liquid pigments meeting a drying mineral surface.

  • Edge Dispersion (Sharp-to-Frayed): The boundaries of the forms feature a “Defined Transition.” While the primary stems and stamen maintain a sharp, high-contrast dispersion to define the architectural shape, the outer petals utilize a frayed, “dry-brush” dispersion that ensures the motifs feel hand-rendered rather than mechanically stamped.

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