The Midnight Garden
A Gothic Coloring Book — 40 Intricate Dark-Botanical Mandalas for Adults
There is a garden that only opens after dark.
Step through the gate into forty intricate, finely detailed dark-botanical scenes to color by lamplight — moonflowers opening at midnight, ivy over old iron, an owl asleep in a yew, a single split nightshade berry spilling its seeds. This is the gentle kind of gothic: moody and atmospheric, never gory or Halloween-cheap.
Each page is a whole story-mandala — a scene drawn in fine line, not a recycled geometric grid or repeating wallpaper. Densely detailed and original to this book, it is made for the colorist who wants a real, slow, immersive project. Facing every mandala is a short atmospheric note: what the scene holds, and one quiet thought to keep you company.
40 Dark-Botanical Scenes That Open After Dark
From the gate to the garden at the end, each page is one whole scene to color — night flowers, moths and ravens, stone and overgrown iron, a quiet memento mori. Read the single line beneath each title and begin with the page that calls you tonight.

The beauty that carries a quiet warning.

What we love grows old, and it's still worth loving.

It's okay to move slowly toward what makes you feel calm.

Rest is allowed. You don't have to carry everything.

Even when things feel cold and bare, you can still stand tall.

With time, soft and patient things win.

What still blooms when everything else has gone quiet.

One small light is enough to wait by.

Gentle and still worthy of respect.

Small, delicate things are worth making.

You can be sweet and still protect yourself.

Going slow is a kind of grace.

Some of us open best in the quiet.

Small does not mean less.

Good and not-so-good can share a stem.

Sometimes the wise thing is to watch.

A little softness makes hard things easier.

It feels good to look after the things that help you.

Follow the small light you trust.

Finding your way takes time, and that's fine.

Growing and waiting happen at the same time.

Your quiet hours count, even when nothing measures them.

A calm surface can be deeper than it looks.

Even hard things grow gentle with time.

Some quiet places hold their own small magic.

It's okay to want a quiet space of your own.

You can bloom in your own time — even at night.

Some things are worth keeping.

Life keeps going, even in old places.

A sad day can still be a calm one.

There's light even in dark places.

Dark things can be calm and lovely too.

Beauty stays, even after things end.

It's nice to collect small wonders.

Some beauty only comes out at night.

A quiet late night can feel cozy.

What we leave behind, the green world takes back.

What sinks from sight is not gone.

Life is short, so hold it gently.

Every ending is also a door.
How it works — a quiet 4-step practice
- Read — a short, plain note beside each scene: what the picture holds, in a few unhurried lines
- Color — the illustrated story-mandala (a whole scene, not a geometric grid), drawn in fine dark-botanical line
- Notice — one line, “Why this page is for you”, so you can find tonight’s page at a glance
- Keep — one quiet thought to take with you; never a lesson, never homework
Perfect for
- The gothic and dark-academia soul who wants moonlit botanicals, not cheerful florals or geometric grids
- Experienced colorists hunting for genuinely intricate, fine-detail line work after one too many “bold & easy” books
- Witchy, dark-romance and dark-fantasy readers who want their aesthetic on every page — elegant, never gory
- Anyone who enjoys a slow, screen-free hour with a beautiful book to color
- A knowing gift for the friend, sister, or teen with refined dark taste who is impossible to shop for
Thick paper, single-sided pages designed for colored pencils, gel pens, and markers without bleed-through. Matte cover, literary dark-academia aesthetic. Elegant, evergreen gothic — no human faces, no gore.
TALLYA 

