Dragons – Steampunk Dynasty

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Bold mechanical dragons. Weathered metals. Smoky bronze tones. Layered industrial detail woven into a world of ancient power and invention.

Bold mechanical dragons. Weathered metals. Smoky bronze tones. Layered industrial detail woven into a world of ancient power and invention.

A New Discovery Arrives This Winter

Shipping to store December 2026 / Pre-order by Sept 2026

This is the kind of collection that invites you to slow down, study it, and imagine what it could become.

We’ll be sharing:

  • Project ideas

  • Coordinating combinations

  • Cosplay concepts

  • Fabric close-ups

  • Preorder information

  • Finished sample builds
    as we move closer to release.

Some fabrics feel decorative.

This one feels like the beginning of an expedition.

A new realm is arriving at Tying Knots N’ Things.

Bold mechanical dragons. Weathered metals. Smoky bronze tones. Layered industrial detail woven into a world of ancient power and invention.

This collection immediately stood out to us at the H+H Show because it feels like more than fabric. It feels like a world waiting to be built.

Perfect for:

  • Quilts & statement pieces

  • Cosplay & maker projects

  • Bags & accessories

  • Wall hangings

  • Fantasy & steampunk builds

  • Mixed-media and creative exploration

The centerpiece panel alone feels like an artifact pulled from another age — surrounded by intricate dragon portraits, metallic textures, gears, engineered motifs, and richly layered coordinates that reward close inspection.

We Had the Chance to Meet the Artist Behind the Collection

One of the highlights of the H+H Show was getting to meet Jason Yenter, the artist behind Dragons – Steampunk Dynasty.

Seeing the collection in person was already impressive.

The detail, texture, and layered mechanical worldbuilding in these fabrics immediately stood out across the showroom floor.

But getting to meet the artist behind it made the experience even better.

There’s something different about standing beside a collection like this in person. The scale of the panel, the metallic depth, the intricate dragon artwork, and the way all the coordinates tie together feels far more immersive than photos alone can capture.