Collection: Foundations — Trailing

Flow begins here.

 

Trailing materials introduce graceful movement and natural extension within a design. Cascading vines, draping greenery, and flowing foliage soften edges, create dimension, and draw the eye beyond the primary design. Used to add length, movement, and an organic finish, these materials help a composition feel natural, connected, and complete.

 

Designers use Trailing materials to extend a design beyond its framework, soften hard boundaries, and create a sense of continuation. Rather than establishing structure or directing movement within a composition, these materials carry the design outward, adding elegance, depth, and visual flow.

 

What to Look For:

  • Cascading or draping growth habits
  • Flexible stems and vines
  • Materials that extend beyond the primary shape
  • Natural downward movement
  • Soft, flowing lines
  • Organic finish and continuity
  • Visual movement beyond the focal area

 

Design Test:

Ask Yourself —

  • If I removed this material, would the design feel shorter, more abrupt, or unfinished?
  • Does this material help carry the design beyond its primary shape or soften its outer edges?

If the answer is yes, you're likely looking at a Trailing material.

 

A Flower Bar — Foundations Collection

Movement | Trailing

Foundations — Trailing