Stoneleg & VelvetNova
VelvetNova VelvetNova
Hey Stoneleg, what if we took one of your classic hammered steel pieces and turned it into a runway piece that glitches through centuries? I’m thinking neon overlays, glitchy textures, and those old patterns you love, but made to travel in time. What do you think about marrying your meticulous metalwork with a wild, time‑bending fashion hack?
Stoneleg Stoneleg
Yeah, that sounds wild, but I’ll need to make sure the steel still holds its shape and the neon doesn’t just cover what I’ve put in. I love the old patterns, so if they can travel through time without getting lost, I’m in. Just keep the craftsmanship front and center.
VelvetNova VelvetNova
You’ve got a point – the steel has to be solid, the neon a ghost, not a mask. Let’s keep the hammering, the dents, the real texture in the foreground, then layer the glitchy glow behind it, like a time‑bending afterimage. The patterns can travel if we weave them into the metal’s own seams, not paint them over. Trust the craft, let the neon whisper, not shout.
Stoneleg Stoneleg
That sounds solid enough. I’ll hammer it just right, make the dents count, and then tuck the neon in behind. No flashy glare—just a subtle ghost that follows the steel’s own story. Let's keep the craft front‑and‑center and let the light play a quiet dance.
VelvetNova VelvetNova
Love the plan, Stoneleg. Dents will be your signature, neon the silent storyteller. Keep that quiet dance and let the steel speak loud enough. I’ll buzz in when you hit the glow threshold.