Diamond forms overlap in characteristic Art Deco geometry, their intersections creating secondary patterns through layered transparency. Cameron interprets 1920s design vocabulary where angular forms met industrial precision and decorative restraint suggested rather than proclaimed luxury.
The pattern employs diamond shapes as primary structural element, arranged so neighbouring forms overlap creating visual depth through intersection. Subtle linear details—perhaps fine stripes or geometric borders within or between diamonds—add complexity without overwhelming the fundamental geometric clarity. Three colourways shift the pattern's character: pink introduces unexpected softness to typically masculine Deco vocabulary, green references period preferences for jade and malachite, brown maintains traditional sophistication. The aesthetic channels the 1920s-30s era when geometric ornament replaced organic Art Nouveau curves, machine-age precision informing decorative arts from architecture to textiles.
Printed in Cornwall with attention to maintaining crisp diamond edges and subtle linear detail that distinguishes refined Art Deco interpretation from crude geometric simplification.
Cameron suits spaces embracing period glamour or contemporary interiors appreciating historical reference. Dining rooms, powder rooms, feature walls in bedrooms or living areas where geometric sophistication creates focal interest. The overlapping diamonds provide visual complexity rewarding sustained observation whilst maintaining overall compositional restraint. Works alongside streamlined furniture, metallic accents, luxe materials like velvet or brass echoing Deco's material preferences. Consider feature wall application allowing the geometric pattern deliberate prominence without overwhelming spatial experience.
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS:
- Width: 75cm per roll
- Length: 7 metres
- Pattern alignment: Straight match
- Repeat: Regular geometric repeat
- Installation: Butt joint
CARE: Wipe clean with damp cloth; the geometric precision maintains its Art Deco character with minimal maintenance.
BRING THIS HOME Where diamonds overlap in Deco logic, walls remember the 1920s when geometry itself suggested luxury without gilded excess.