Bloom Sing Of Rose 104mod1 Orange Piece May 2026
Title: Bloom Sing of Rose — 104mod1 (Orange Piece)
Audience: collectors of sensory art, boutique galleries, luxury gifting market.
To understand the value of the "bloom sing of rose 104mod1 orange piece," one must appreciate the engineering insanity inside it. bloom sing of rose 104mod1 orange piece
The Petal Mechanics: Each of the 12 petals is a bi-metallic strip coated in a shape-memory alloy (Nitinol). When a low-voltage current (provided by a hand-cranked magnetic generator—no batteries allowed) passes through, the metal "remembers" its open position. The "bloom" takes exactly 104 seconds from dormancy to full extension. As each segment clicks into place, a tuned anvil underneath the petal strikes a resonance pin, producing a note. The sequence of those 12 notes, played in order, is the "song."
The Olfactory Core: Inside the central stamen is a glass capillary tube holding 2ml of the "Rose 104" formula. This is not a perfume spray. It uses a piezoelectric disc to vibrate the liquid at 1.04 MHz, creating a cold vapor (no heat degradation). The "orange piece" adds a secondary chamber of distilled Blood Orange terpenes, which vaporizes only in the final three seconds of the bloom, creating a shocking citrus top-note that fades into the leather-rose drydown. Title: Bloom Sing of Rose — 104mod1 (Orange Piece)
The "Sing" Anomaly: Most 104mod1 units produce a minor key chime. However, the three "orange pieces" have a known firmware glitch (or feature, depending on your perspective). Due to a mis-flashed microcontroller, the "orange piece" sings in a reversed canon: the song plays backward from petal 12 to petal 1. The result is a haunting, atonal "backwards rose" effect that has been described by one collector as "the sound of autumn happening in reverse."
Before we can appreciate the artifact, we must dissect its name. Unlike mass-produced goods, the naming convention here is deliberately modular and cryptographic. To understand the value of the "bloom sing
The "bloom sing of rose 104mod1 orange piece" originated from a mysterious atelier operating out of a converted water tower in Lyon, France, between 2017 and 2019. The creator, a reclusive bio-artist formerly associated with the anti-perfume collective Nez Mécanique, intended to bridge the gap between mechanical sculpture and olfactory performance art.
At the time, the art world was obsessed with "static blooms"—3D-printed flowers that did nothing. H. (the artist) found this necrotic. The goal of the 104mod1 series was to create a living machinic rose: one that required no water, but demanded attention. It would "sleep" as a compact, geometric orange nodule (roughly the size of a lime), and upon detecting human breath (specifically the CO2 and heat differential), it would initiate the "bloom sing" sequence.
The "orange piece" variant was the third and final prototype before the project was abandoned due to a lawsuit from a major fragrance house claiming the "singing rose" technology infringed on a 1987 patent for a talking flower vase. H. vanished. The remaining 47 units (including the three orange pieces) were scattered across private collections in Tokyo, Reykjavik, and a forgotten storage unit in New Jersey.