Fabulous Travel Art Prints

Exclusive to Fab • Framed & ready to hang · Rated 5★ by 3k+ shoppers

See more
30% off sale ends in

“Love my pictures. Excellent quality and fast delivery. Thank you.”

- SARAH H.

“The print is beautiful, is on quality paper and it exceeded my expectations”

- Carol M.

“What a lovely service! The print came fast and perfectly framed.”

- Lisa A.

Market Day Essentials Art Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From £13.99 £19.99

Fresh Market Finds Canvas Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From £55.99 £79.99

Fresh Finds, Everyday Joy Art Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From £13.99 £19.99

Fresh Picks in Blue Net Art Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From £13.99 £19.99

Market Day Essentials Canvas Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From £55.99 £79.99

Mediterranean Lemon Crates Canvas Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From £55.99 £79.99

Mediterranean Citrus Crates Canvas Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From £55.99 £79.99

We’re serious about art, ask away

From sizing to framing and print quality, Fab's art experts break it all down—so you can find the right art for your space.

Need more help? Contact our team here

How do I choose the right size travel art print for above my sofa?

Use the two-thirds rule: your print (or group of prints) should span roughly two-thirds the width of your sofa. For a standard UK three-seater (around 200cm wide), a single large travel art print at 70x100cm makes a confident statement, or try a pair of 50x70cm destination prints hung 5-8cm apart for a gallery feel. Go big here. A single small frame floating above a sofa always looks like an afterthought.

How do I create a travel gallery wall that actually looks good?

Start with one anchor piece (your largest print, ideally 50x70cm or bigger) and build outward. Stick to a single frame finish across all prints so it reads as a curated collection rather than a mismatched scrapbook. We'd recommend our black or natural oak frames for travel prints because they let the artwork do the talking. Lay everything out on the floor first, keep spacing consistent at 5-7cm between frames, and hang the centre of the grouping at eye level (roughly 150cm from the floor). Five to seven frames is the sweet spot for most walls.

Do your travel prints come framed and ready to hang?

Yes, every framed travel art print ships as one finished piece, with the print properly fitted into a solid wood frame, UV-protective acrylic glazing, and hanging fixtures already attached. You literally take it out of the box and put it on the wall. This matters more than people realise. Cheap framed prints from other sources often arrive with the frame and print separate, or warp within a few months because the materials aren't up to scratch. Ours are built from FSC-certified wood with museum-grade giclée printing, so they look sharp and stay flat for years.

Which rooms work best for travel themed wall art?

Living rooms and hallways are the obvious winners, but don't sleep on home offices and spare bedrooms. A large city skyline print or vintage travel poster above a desk gives a bland workspace real personality. For hallways, a line of three or four smaller framed travel prints (30x40cm in matching frames) turns a corridor people just walk through into something worth pausing at. In living rooms, lean into warm-toned destination prints (think terracotta rooftops, golden hour coastlines) to add depth without clashing with neutral furniture.

Are gallery walls still in style in 2026?

Very much so, but the trend has shifted away from chaotic salon-style hangs toward more intentional, edited groupings. Think five to seven prints in a tight grid or clean horizontal line rather than thirty frames covering an entire wall. Travel art prints suit this perfectly because they share a natural visual theme, whether that's vintage travel posters, photography from different cities, or a colour palette pulled from Mediterranean blues and ochres. Cohesion is the thing that separates a gallery wall that looks designed from one that looks like a car boot sale.