With this pattern, I used a simple flower brush that I first drew by hand and then imported into Adobe Brush. The brush was then exported to Adobe Illustrator and recolored and made into a swatch. I wanted something that was simple, feminine and still floral. That was also the motivation behind the color scheme as well. I wanted a color scheme that was light and evoked thoughts of spring and femininity, without relying on the traditional "girly" colors like pinks and reds. This pattern is meant to work well in both textile design and as digital paper, this could even be used as a digital wallpaper.
This pattern was designed with sort of an Asian inspired theme in mind. The idea for this pattern came from looking over kimono designs as well as Alphonse Mucha paintings, and there is still a bit of a simplistic and stylized element to it. This pattern is meant to work as a digital paper design, possibly even a wrapping paper. Due to the current color scheme (which can be changed out depending on the project), it isn't meant as a clothing/textile pattern but rather for 2-dimensional purposes. The pattern was created completely in Adobe Illustrator.
This is a poster mock up of the "Teal" pattern. This poster was created using Blue Monkey Lab's free poster mock-up stock file in Adobe Photoshop. This helps to show what this pattern would look like in paper format and as hanging artwork.
This is another poster mockup using Blue Monkey Lab's stock poster mock-up in Adobe Photoshop. Again, this helps to show what the "Kokeshi" pattern would look like as a possible hanging art piece.
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Patterns

For the pieces in this "Pattern" project, I wanted to show simplistic and stylized floral pattern designs that are both feminine and unique.
These pieces were both created using Adobe Illustrator coupled with some traditional drawing to create one of the brushes.

Jessica Emerson
Design student Baltimore, MD