ResolvableOwl
Notorious Lyear
These days, many of the fancy swirl designs are either based on a multitude of different colours (ITP, ombré, Taiwan), or they play off their brilliance best with light background/base colours (mini drop, hanger).
Some swirls (OPW, wood grain, secret feather) work well in principle, but are sensitive to low contrast IMHO.
Imagine you'd be challenged to make an appealing soap with at least 75% of a base batter that has a dark brown/green/grey/slate colour with not much brilliance by itself. Add one or two accent colours, inside the soap body, not just on the top. Sounds like the job for – which swirl technique?
But I'm sure there is someone out there whose favourite design technique works best with dark base colour, and I'll hear for the first time about it here.
(I have considered making this an unofficial challenge, like @FragranceGuy's wildly popular grocery store challenge. But I'm undecided since I'm not exactly asking without reason, and I'd be uncomfortable with just copying a great design in the end.)
Some swirls (OPW, wood grain, secret feather) work well in principle, but are sensitive to low contrast IMHO.
Imagine you'd be challenged to make an appealing soap with at least 75% of a base batter that has a dark brown/green/grey/slate colour with not much brilliance by itself. Add one or two accent colours, inside the soap body, not just on the top. Sounds like the job for – which swirl technique?
One way to go there are variations of tried-and-tested swirls with asymmetric amounts of batter. My asymmetric Lollipop as an example. I could also imagine to this similarly with tiger stripes, spin swirl or the dancing funnel. There are also some gems hidden at places like in the SMF challenge March 2017 Black Background Soap Entry Thread (worth browsing the archives at any time ).
(I have considered making this an unofficial challenge, like @FragranceGuy's wildly popular grocery store challenge. But I'm undecided since I'm not exactly asking without reason, and I'd be uncomfortable with just copying a great design in the end.)