nature
Dunes: Geometry Without Architects
Nothing designed the desert, and you can tell — it is far too confident.
A sand dune is what wind looks like when it stands still. Every ridge in these photographs is a frozen gust; every shadow is a sundial that only tells one time of day, and it is always golden hour somewhere on the slip face.
Deserts photograph like minimalism that got there first. Two tones, one line, no clutter — the same vocabulary designers spend careers approaching, drawn freehand by weather over ten thousand years.
As wallpapers, dunes are quietly practical: the low-contrast sand hides fingerprints on a matte screen and flatters both dark and light icon sets. Serenity with utility, which is more than most décor manages.