Night Coral began as an experiment in pigment and darkness. Pools of teal bloom and dissolve across a deep ground, forming shapes that feel somewhere between coral, ink, and underwater shadow.
The pattern doesn’t announce itself immediately. At first it reads like movement — soft bursts of color floating across a dark surface. Look closer and the forms begin to resemble reef structures or bioluminescent life drifting through deep water.
Edges feather outward like ink dropped into dye, creating organic halos and layered depth. Some areas glow softly, others recede into shadow, giving the wall a sense of motion rather than repetition.
Night Coral works beautifully in spaces where mood matters: dining rooms, bedrooms, powder rooms, or anywhere a darker palette can add atmosphere. Against wood, brass, and pale linens, the teal blooms take on an almost luminous quality.
It’s less a pattern than a field of color and movement — something that feels discovered rather than designed.