Transform your space with Vase Art Prints that speak volumes about your unique style. These captivating pieces offer a touch of elegance and sophistication, turning any room into a reflection of your personality. Forget the hassle of renovations; simply choose your favorite print and watch your space come alive. Made to order, framed to perfection, and ready to hang, these prints set your home apart from the ordinary.
Kitchens get the worst of it. They're the hardest-working room in the house and somehow end up with the least considered walls. A vase print fixes that faster than almost...
Vase prints are the most underrated anchor subject in wall art. The vertical shape gives a gallery wall a built-in compositional spine, and the painterly subject matter sits comfortably alongside...
A blank wall can be intimidating. You know you want art, but where do you even start? You scroll through endless options online, walk through galleries feeling lost, or stare...
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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.
They're one of the best choices you can make for a kitchen wall. A still life vase print brings colour and personality without competing with the visual chaos of open shelving and appliances. We'd suggest a single framed vase print (around 40x50cm) on the wall between upper cabinets, or a larger 50x70cm piece on a blank wall opposite your worktop. Our frames use UV-protective acrylic glazing, so even a sun-drenched kitchen window won't fade the print over time. Go for a ceramic vase illustration with warm tones if your kitchen has wood or neutral cabinetry.
How should I style vase wall art in a living room that feels unfinished?
If you've got a blank wall above your sofa that's making the whole room feel empty, a single large vase art print (60x80cm or 70x100cm framed) is the fastest way to fix it. The 2/3 rule is your friend here: the print should be roughly two-thirds the width of the sofa beneath it, so it feels proportional rather than lost. For a living room, we love botanical vase art in muted greens or earthy terracotta tones, which anchor a space without overwhelming it. Our framed prints arrive ready to hang with fixtures already attached, so you can go from delivery to "finished room" in about ten minutes.
What's the difference between minimalist vase prints and vintage vase wall art?
Minimalist vase art prints tend to feature clean lines, simple silhouettes, and a limited palette, often just one or two colours on a neutral background. They're perfect for modern or Scandi-inspired rooms where you want the art to feel calm rather than busy. Vintage vase wall art, on the other hand, draws from historical still life traditions with richer colour, decorative ceramic patterns, and more detail. If your room already has lots of texture (think linen cushions, rattan, patterned rugs), go minimalist. If your space is fairly plain, a vintage-style vase print adds warmth and character you can't get from a clean-lined piece.
Can I pair a vase print with real vases on a shelf or mantelpiece?
Absolutely, and honestly this is one of the most satisfying ways to decorate. Hang a flower vase print above a shelf or mantelpiece, then place one or two real vases below it. The trick is contrast: if your print features an ornate, colourful ceramic vase, keep the real ones simple and muted (plain white or terracotta). This creates a layered, curated look without the whole arrangement feeling like a ceramics museum. A 40x50cm or 50x70cm framed print sits perfectly above a standard mantelpiece.
What artwork subjects pair well with vase prints in a gallery wall?
Vase art prints are incredibly versatile gallery wall anchors. They pair naturally with botanical prints, still life compositions, and abstract art in a similar colour family. For a cohesive gallery wall, we'd recommend mixing two or three vase illustration prints with a couple of floral close-ups and one abstract piece, keeping all frames in the same finish (our natural oak or black frames work brilliantly for this). Stick to odd numbers of prints and keep spacing consistent at around 5cm between frames. This gives you a collected, intentional look rather than a random jumble.
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