Deco Starburst
Six-pointed bursts radiating across the field — the explosive geometry of Art Deco metalwork meeting a steady six-fold repeat.
Six-pointed bursts arranged in a tight six-fold repeat. Each starburst throws its rays outward; the rays of one tile lock against the rays of the next, and the field reads as a single radiant surface rather than a row of isolated stars.
The starburst belongs to the visual language of 1920s and ’30s metalwork — elevator doors, radio cabinets, theater marquees. The rays carry the same forward-leaning, electric feel that gave Art Deco its character.
At jewelry scale one burst becomes a pendant. The same figure scales up to grille panels, ceiling medallions, or screen doors.
The same patience that fills a pendant fills a panel.