Geometric Patterns

Triskele

A three-armed spiral repeating across the plane — the triskele figure that runs through Celtic stonework, Greek pottery, and Bronze Age metalwork.

Triskele

The triskele — three spiraling arms radiating from a central hub — is one of the oldest known symbols in pattern history, appearing on Bronze Age metalwork, Greek pottery, and Celtic stone carvings from Newgrange to the Isle of Man.

This version locks the triskele into a strict three-fold repeat across the plane. The arms of one figure curve into the arms of the next, and the field reads as a continuous spinning surface — the rotational energy of the single symbol multiplied into a textured tile.

At jewelry scale one triskele lifts out as a pendant face. The same drawing scales up to a tile inset, a stonework panel, or a piece of cast metalwork.

The same patience that fills a pendant fills a panel.