Tri Propeller
Three-bladed propeller forms rotating across a steady three-fold lattice — geometry that reads as machine-age and ancient at the same time.
Three-bladed propeller figures repeated across a tight three-fold lattice. Each propeller’s blades meet the blades of its neighbors, and the field reads as a continuous spinning surface — a hint of motion frozen into a static pattern.
The form sits in a long lineage of three-armed rotational motifs that run through Celtic stonework, Greek pottery, and mid-century printed textiles. The drawing is at once ancient and machine-age.
At jewelry scale one propeller becomes a pendant. The same drawing scales up to a screen, a tile floor, or a printed textile panel.
The same patience that fills a pendant fills a panel.