When origami flowers refuse to be polite about it.
Bloom takes the precision of paper folding and turns up the volume—bold coral and crimson petals unfold with geometric confidence against that signature teal backdrop. Each flower is a study in dimensional drama, with sage and cream leaves providing breathing room between the bursts of saturated color. This is paper art that knows it's stunning and isn't apologizing for it.
The vibe: Japanese paper craft meets tropical boldness. Sophisticated energy. The friend who shows up to the minimalist party wearing statement jewelry and immediately becomes the most interesting person in the room.
Works beautifully in: Dining rooms that host actual conversations, creative offices where "inspiring" isn't just corporate speak, boutique retail spaces, modern salons, yoga studios that aren't afraid of color, or bedrooms for people who wake up ready to engage with the world. This is restrained maximalism—if that's your contradiction of choice.
Real talk: Bloom sits right in the middle of the Papercut collection's range. It's bolder than Scattered but maintains that same dimensional, handcrafted quality. The flowers demand attention without screaming for it, which is a harder balance to strike than it sounds. If you want floral but can't stomach "garden party," this is your pattern.
The layered petals create genuine depth that shifts throughout the day. Side lighting emphasizes the dimensional quality, while direct lighting brings out the richness of the coral and crimson tones against the cooler background.
For people who appreciate restraint but aren't interested in invisibility, paper art lovers with a pulse, and anyone who thinks "floral" shouldn't automatically mean "safe."
Available in 19" wide rolls across three material tiers—because boldness this controlled deserves a proper foundation.
Collection note: Part of the Papercut series, where precision meets personality, and dimensional design proves that flat is overrated.