Lightbringers 2 – Canvas

from $120.00
This piece is exactly what the title says: two faces in profile, facing each other across a circular composition. The sun lives on the left, radiating outward with wavy rays in shades of pink, coral, and warm gold. The moon anchors the right side, defined by flowing scroll work in deep navy and steel blue. Between them sits a shared middle ground of concentric rings dotted with tiny crystal accents that catch the light, creating a sense of exchange or conversation happening in the space they share. Every element here is built from hand-rolled paper coils. The sun's rays are individual strips curled and layered to create depth and movement. The moon's flowing hair is made from larger spirals that echo each other, creating rhythm and balance. Those crystal accents in the center? Each one was placed by hand, positioned to suggest moments where light passes between day and night. The outer ring is a bold yellow outline that frames everything and pulls the two figures into a unified whole. What makes this work is the restraint mixed with detail. From across the room, you see the concept immediately: sun and moon, opposite and eternal. Step closer and you notice the individual paper strips, the way colors transition, the precision of each coil. There's movement here without chaos, balance without symmetry. This is a piece about duality and connection, built with the kind of patience that only handmade work demands. On canvas, this piece feels painterly. The texture of the weave softens the smooth edges of the paper coils, making the whole thing read more like an illustration than a print. Color wraps around the sides so the piece has presence from every angle. The sun's radiating rays and the moon's scrollwork both benefit from the slight texture—they feel hand-built rather than perfectly precise. Hung on a wall, the canvas version has real weight and depth.
Size:
This piece is exactly what the title says: two faces in profile, facing each other across a circular composition. The sun lives on the left, radiating outward with wavy rays in shades of pink, coral, and warm gold. The moon anchors the right side, defined by flowing scroll work in deep navy and steel blue. Between them sits a shared middle ground of concentric rings dotted with tiny crystal accents that catch the light, creating a sense of exchange or conversation happening in the space they share. Every element here is built from hand-rolled paper coils. The sun's rays are individual strips curled and layered to create depth and movement. The moon's flowing hair is made from larger spirals that echo each other, creating rhythm and balance. Those crystal accents in the center? Each one was placed by hand, positioned to suggest moments where light passes between day and night. The outer ring is a bold yellow outline that frames everything and pulls the two figures into a unified whole. What makes this work is the restraint mixed with detail. From across the room, you see the concept immediately: sun and moon, opposite and eternal. Step closer and you notice the individual paper strips, the way colors transition, the precision of each coil. There's movement here without chaos, balance without symmetry. This is a piece about duality and connection, built with the kind of patience that only handmade work demands. On canvas, this piece feels painterly. The texture of the weave softens the smooth edges of the paper coils, making the whole thing read more like an illustration than a print. Color wraps around the sides so the piece has presence from every angle. The sun's radiating rays and the moon's scrollwork both benefit from the slight texture—they feel hand-built rather than perfectly precise. Hung on a wall, the canvas version has real weight and depth.