SL3-16
Named for the sacred, upside-down tree of the Bhagavad Gita, Ashvattha reveals the hidden face of a traditional Indian buta print. The design is shown from the reverse, where the vermilion dye has bled through the cotton, softening the original motif into a cloud of emotional color.
This inversion transforms precision into atmosphere, pattern into pulse. Like the roots of the world tree reaching upward, Ashvattha honors the unseen side of creation — where beauty is born not from control, but from surrender.
Named for the sacred, upside-down tree of the Bhagavad Gita, Ashvattha reveals the hidden face of a traditional Indian buta print. The design is shown from the reverse, where the vermilion dye has bled through the cotton, softening the original motif into a cloud of emotional color.
This inversion transforms precision into atmosphere, pattern into pulse. Like the roots of the world tree reaching upward, Ashvattha honors the unseen side of creation — where beauty is born not from control, but from surrender.
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