Dust & Record
Dust motes settled on the porcelain's surface, revealing subtle striations like growth rings within stone—faint echoes of metallic presence concentrated towards its center. Closer inspection showed these layers weren’t uniform; some whorls appeared tightly compressed while others stretched and blurred as if responding to differing currents. Repeated handling seemed to intensify this effect, subtly shifting the distribution of particles with each touch. The resulting sheen wasn't simply reflected light but a testament to accumulated interactions—a merging of the object’s structure with its own history of being held.