Patterns at every scale.
The same patterns that become jewelry pendants also become fabric by the yard, wallpaper by the roll, table linens, curtains, and cushion covers. By using color, the surface designs can draw on an even wider range of styles and inspirations. Every pattern is built to repeat cleanly and read confidently at any size.
The collection
Moroccan Stars
Six-pointed star geometry rooted in the Islamic tile tradition — warm reds and deep pinks held together by fine orange line work.
Moroccan Block
A bolder companion to the Moroccan Stars set — interlocking block geometry with more visual weight and more pattern depth.
Moroccan Gingham
A hybrid — Moroccan tile structure crossed with the soft cross-hatched warmth of woven gingham.
Space-Filling Silhouettes
A space-filling tessellation in the Escher tradition, where interlocking silhouettes leave no gap between forms.
Hex Tiles
Hexagonal tile geometry — the honeycomb register that shows up in Japanese kumiko joinery and the close-packed efficiency of nature.
Truchet
A small set of simple tiles, oriented at random, that generate emergent line patterns the eye can't quite resolve.
Snub Octagon
Eight-pointed star geometry that has anchored mosque and palace surfaces from Córdoba to Isfahan for a thousand years.
Double Maze
Line work in the labyrinth tradition — interlocking maze geometries that echo the patterns cut into medieval cathedral floors.
Nouveau Poppies
Curving poppies and sinuous abstract forms in the Art Nouveau tradition, drawn into a disciplined repeat.
Triangle Snakeskin
Triangular tile geometry overlaid with a scaled, hand-stamped texture.
Pantone Plaid
A plaid in the classic cross-hatched textile tradition — woven-feeling, balanced in color.
Pinwheel Confetti
A scatter of small triangles, pinwheel motifs, and dot accents drifting across a pale ground.