Breeze Cross
An open cross-shaped block, drawn from the mid-century breeze-block screens of the American Southwest.
Breeze blocks, stepped forms, and the geometry of mid-century architecture.
An open cross-shaped block, drawn from the mid-century breeze-block screens of the American Southwest.
A second-pass cross-and-bar lattice that thickens the original Exes tile — the geometry now reads as woven instead of stamped.
A blocky H-tile with a hammer-head silhouette, repeating so each piece locks into its neighbors. In the family of mid-century breeze blocks and paving units.
A repeating pair of full and crescent discs that reads, depending on how the eye lands on it, as moon phases or as pure optical-art geometry.
A field of right triangles, each one pointing a different way — order at the top, drift at the piece level. Pulls from quilt patchwork and mosaic pavement.
Three-bladed propeller forms rotating across a steady three-fold lattice — geometry that reads as machine-age and ancient at the same time.
Zigzagging triangular bands marching across a steady three-fold field — the visual rhythm of mid-century textile and graphic design.
Square tiles each carrying the same quarter-circle motif, each rotated to a different orientation. The curves connect across boundaries into long arcs, closed loops, and wandering paths.