Tri Scale
Triangles arranged into overlapping scales — geometry that takes on a botanical or aquatic feel through the rhythm of overlap.
Triangles arranged into a scaled, overlapping repeat — the way fish scales, roof shingles, and dragon-skin armor have always been drawn. The triangle is the structural unit; the overlap is what gives the pattern its visual rhythm.
The figure crosses several traditions at once: Japanese sashiko stitching, Mediterranean roof tiles, woven textile patterns. The same logic — small repeating units, overlapping in regular rows — produces a surface that reads as both geometric and organic.
At jewelry scale one section becomes a pendant. The same drawing scales up to a tiled wall, a textile pattern, or a piece of inlaid panel work.
The same patience that fills a pendant fills a panel.