Manifesto
Vintage Interiors
222 Tokens
Vintage Interiors is a love letter to lived-in rooms — places that carry the warmth of use, the poetry of objects, and the glow of light on old surfaces. This collection reimagines interior design as a form of memory-making, where every scene is a photorealistic still captured with 1980s film grain, preserving imaginary moments of how we inhabit space, arrange our belongings, and let time leave its gentle marks on the places we call home.
Rooms that Remember
Vintage Interiors begins with the idea that rooms can hold memory. The scuff on a wooden floor, the faded edge of a rug, the way light falls on a chipped ceramic sink — these are marks of time, not flaws. They tell you that life has happened here, quietly and repeatedly.
In this collection, every interior is a character. A living room remembers music and conversation. A kitchen remembers late-night tea and early-morning coffee. A bathroom remembers baths drawn after long days. Each scene is a fragment of a story, presented without characters but full of their traces.
Era Without Nostalgia-Glare
Rather than recreating any one decade perfectly, Vintage Interiors borrows freely from art deco curves, mid-century silhouettes, 60s and 70s colour palettes, and bohemian details. It filters them through the authentic aesthetic of 1980s film photography: photorealistic detail with subtle grain, natural color warmth, and the organic imperfections of analog capture.
There are no brand names, no screens, no modern logos. The point is not consumer nostalgia, but the timeless comfort of analogue spaces, seen through an equally analogue lens.
Objects as Poetry
In these rooms, objects become lines of a poem: a clawfoot tub, a velvet armchair, a hanging plant, a stack of vinyl, a brass lamp, a patterned sink. None of them shout, but together they hum.
The collection treats interior decor not as status, but as a vocabulary of care and personality. Every shelf, tile and textile is a way of saying, "someone chose this." That choice is the art.
Light as Storyteller
Light is the final trait: golden hour in a tiny kitchen, blue dusk through a bathroom window, lamplight pooling over a side table stacked with books.
Vintage Interiors uses light to anchor emotion. Some rooms are bright and airy; others are moody and intimate. All of them feel like they could be waiting for you to walk in, captured in that moment with the warm, grainy authenticity of 1980s film stock.
Other Collections
Dust




Dust is a study in chalk, pigment and breath — abstract forms arranged like quiet mathematics.
Circles, lines and woven geometries drift across soft paper textures, fading at the edges as if they were drawn and erased a hundred times before settling into their final shape. Some pieces feel like blueprints, others like constellations or half-remembered maps, but all of them carry the same powdered calm: the hush of chalk hanging in the air.
Spectra




Spectra is a study of matter revealed as light.
Each work is rendered as a long-exposure spectral field — a restrained, museum-grade image where compounds and materials appear as bands and lines held against deep charcoal. These are not diagrams. There are no axes, grids, labels, or legends. Only the quiet evidence of a signature.
Across the collection, four regimes are held in tension: hydrocarbons, nuclear fuels, clean-energy materials, and metal alloys. The politics is embedded in comparison, not slogans — warmth versus precision, diffusion versus containment, abundance versus legacy — expressed only through light.
Katheros




Katheros is a generative fine-art collection of ink-based geometric compositions — pure lines, sacred shapes and interference patterns rendered with mathematical clarity and quiet aesthetic restraint.


