Opal
Opal doesn't try to be beautiful. It just is.
Formed over millions of years from silica and water, opal holds light differently than other stones. It doesn't reflect it back, it plays with it. Soft pink becomes cool blue becomes gentle purple, depending on the angle, the moment, the mood.
Opal is built on that same principle: beauty that shifts, that doesn't demand attention but rewards it.
The pattern is circles. Overlapping, endless, mathematical. The kind of shape that appears everywhere once you start looking, ripples on water, cells under a microscope, the way a dog curls up to sleep.
We chose gradients that move the way natural opal does. Not bright. Not loud. Just soft transitions from one hue to another, like morning turning into afternoon.
The strange thing about opal is that it's never actually one color. It's iridescent, which means it's always becoming something else, always in between.
That in-betweenness felt right for this design. Not pastel. Not neutral. Somewhere more interesting: a color space that exists in early light, in quiet moments, in the textures of everyday tenderness.
Opal doesn't announce. It accompanies.