Floral Diamond began as a question: how do you hold something as elusive as color and make it feel like an object in the room—something that breathes, pauses, and guides the eye? The answer for me took the shape of petals and geometry, of gradients that refuse to stay still.
At first glance the piece is a celebration of color: blues that tip into aquamarine, greens that pulse toward chartreuse, and warm reds that bloom at the edges like a memory of sunset. But the work is not merely decorative; it is an investigation of balance. I layered overlapping petals in luminous gradients so each edge catches a different hue. The central flower is framed by a precise diamond — a geometric counterpoint that lends structure to the composition and invites a longer look. The interplay between organic curves and strict lines creates a quiet tension: order holding movement, form containing flow.
Creating this digitally allowed me to control subtle shifts in tone and depth in ways that feel nearly impossible with traditional media. Those soft transitions you see — where one petal dissolves into another, or where blue sighs into red — are deliberate choices to suggest space and motion. A viewer might feel the petals slowly rotating, or sense an inward pull toward the diamond's core. That sense of movement is my way of making color act like air in a room, shifting the mood without asking permission.
Sustainability matters to me. Working primarily in digital media reduces the material footprint of my practice, and when physical prints are requested I choose ink and substrates with environmental certifications whenever possible. Art should enliven your space without costing the planet its calm; Floral Diamond is designed to be both radiant and responsible.
Who is this piece for? Someone who loves color but seeks refinement; someone who wants an energizing focal point that doesn’t shout, but converses. It can ignite a muted foyer, soften a stark office, or bring life to a quiet reading nook. And because the gradients are so dynamic, the work interacts with different light conditions — morning sun, warm evening lamplight, or cool gallery lighting — revealing new facets as hours pass.
If you find yourself drawn to the image, imagine it in your space. What happens when a crisp geometric line meets your everyday routine? What memories do the shifting colors unlock? That’s the experience I want to offer: a piece that asks questions, holds answers, and keeps giving with every glance.
If you’d like to bring Floral Diamond into your home or discuss custom sizing and eco-friendly print options, I’d be delighted to talk. Art, for me, is a conversation — and this one begins with color.