Learn how to interpret Mudéjar geometry, stucco carving, tile chromatics, and inscription echoes inside the Alcázar.

| Interface | Observation | Interpretive Angle |
|---|---|---|
| Stucco → Tile | Shift from matte to gloss | Light modulation; hierarchy |
| Wood Lintel → Carved Frieze | Warm tone to pale detail | Thermal + symbolic transition |
| Shadow Band → Inscription Panel | Contrast accentuates text-like zone | Emphasis via absence of color |
Morning light grazes relief, exaggerating depth; midday flattening encourages color reading; late afternoon warms glaze surfaces, enriching blues & ochres.
Salt efflorescence & humidity require breathable micro-mortars; visible tiny plugs mark stabilization points — a sign of care, not damage.

Mudéjar surfaces are negotiated aesthetics: read them as cultural bilingualism rendered in geometry, light, and craft labor.

I built this to help you enjoy the palace intelligently—clear pacing, better timing, and context that makes each patio resonate.
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