Art Nouveau Easter Rabbit in a Spring Garden
A patterned rabbit sits among decorated Easter eggs, daffodils, blossoms, and long art nouveau vines curling into an ornate frame.
🎨 How to color it
Layer soft tawny browns or pearl gray on the rabbit, then give the daffodils buttery yellow, the decorated eggs robin’s-egg blue and lavender, and the border leaves fresh spring green. Use sharp pencils for the rabbit’s tiny scrollwork, egg bands, and flower centers, turning the page as needed so each narrow curve gets a clean edge. For a seasonal twist, let the vines shift from pale green at the bottom to deeper emerald near the top, as if spring is climbing the frame.
Liora’s Spring Maze — The long curling vine above the rabbit’s ears seems to be only decoration, but it is actually the top lane of a game racing through the garden frame. Read the full story →
The long curling vine above the rabbit’s ears seems to be only decoration, but it is actually the top lane of a game racing through the garden frame. Along the upper arch, two daffodils lean like trumpets beside a cluster of blossoms, and only then does Liora, the bright-eyed rabbit, appear in the middle of her own challenge.
She has just invented Spring Maze, a game with one rule: follow the swirls without touching the same leaf twice. Can you find the tiny flower hidden inside Liora’s tall left ear? That is the starting bell. From there, the trail dives over her patterned cheek, loops across her shoulder, and shoots toward the eggs at her paws.
The three eggs at the lower left are the first gate, painted with dots, loops, and stripes that must be crossed in order. Then the path springs to the two round eggs on the lower right, where small blossoms guard the finish. Liora sits perfectly still, whiskers aimed forward, but every curl on her fur looks ready to dash. The game ends only when the final vine at the bottom border sweeps back under the flowers and returns to her quiet front paws.