iggi

.boo

The Hive

iggi.boo is a cabinet of curiosities curated by someone who sees the world in hexagons. Every surface, every text block, every idea occupies its own honeycomb cell -- a self-contained chamber holding a fragment of something larger, something that can only be understood by seeing how all the chambers fit together.

The hexagon is nature's most efficient tessellation. Bees know it. Basalt columns know it. Snowflake crystals know it. We build from the same geometry because it is the geometry that wastes nothing.

Prismatic Vision

To look through a hexagonal aperture is to see the world refracted into six simultaneous perspectives. Each facet catches a different angle of light, and the interference pattern between them produces something none could produce alone -- a color that exists only in the overlap, a shape that emerges only from the combination.

This is what iggi.boo makes visible: the patterns that hide between perspectives, the structures that emerge when you stop looking at the parts and start looking at the spaces between them.

The Dream Cell

In the dream cell, the rules of the hive relax. Hexagons soften into circles. Hard edges dissolve into gradients. The precise mathematics of tessellation gives way to the fluid logic of half-remembered spaces where rooms have too many doors and corridors fold back on themselves.

The dream is not separate from the structure. It is the structure, seen from the inside.

In the deepest chamber of the hive, there is a cell that holds no content -- only the memory of every cell that could have existed but did not. This is the zero-point of the honeycomb: the place where all possible hexagons converge into a single, impossibly bright point of amber light.