Description
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Visual Dispersion (Mottled): The primary background field exhibits “Mechanical Fossil Mottling”. The pigment is dispersed as a dense, high-contrast layer of “cracked earth” and stippled stone textures, providing a tactile, “relief-map” surface quality across the grey and magenta zones.
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Pigment Dispersion (Graduated): The design features “Structural Tonal Bleeding”. The entire composition transitions vertically from a bright lime to a deep fuchsia, with the pigment dispersed in soft, atmospheric layers that merge through the central “fossilized” grey zone, providing a sense of immense soft-focus depth.
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Edge Dispersion (Fractured-to-Crisp): The boundaries of the main forms feature a “Dual-Action Transition”. While the hibiscus bouquets maintain high-fidelity, crisp margins, the background skeletal branches and internal “cracked” textures are dispersed with porous, weathered edges, ensuring the movement feels both spontaneous and grounded in a physical material structure.















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