THE WALL ART STYLE GUIDE

Stop Decorating with William Morris Prints Like It's 1890: A Modern Guide

How to hang Morris in a 2020s flat without your lounge looking like a Cotswolds tea room.

Jasmine Okoro
JASMINE OKORO
May 29, 2026
Stop Decorating with William Morris Prints Like It's 1890: A Modern Guide

William Morris designs are having a serious moment, and not just with people who own Aga cookers. The challenge is hanging Strawberry Thief above your boucle sofa without the whole room sliding into chintz territory. This guide solves that, room by room.

Why William Morris prints work in modern interiors

Morris designs are dense, symmetrical and saturated. That sounds like a recipe for fussiness, but it's actually why they hold up against minimalist interiors. A single Morris print becomes a focal point in a pared-back room precisely because everything else is quiet.

The trick is treating them as art, not decor. A framed Pimpernel print hung above a plain oak console reads as graphic, almost contemporary. The same print on wallpaper, curtains and cushions reads as a costume drama set. Restraint does the heavy lifting.

There's also a scale advantage prints have over wallpaper. You can introduce Morris in a controlled dose, see how it plays with your space, and stop before things tip into pastiche. That's the whole permission slip for decorating with Morris in a modern flat.

A bright modern living room with a single large framed William Morris Strawberry Thief print above a low grey linen sofa, light oak floors, a tan leather armchair and a tall fiddle leaf fig

Living room: choosing the right design and size for above the sofa

Above the sofa is where most people overthink this. The rule we use: your art should span roughly two thirds of the sofa width. For a standard three-seater (around 200cm), that means 130 to 150cm of art. A single 70x100cm framed print works beautifully if you centre it. Two 50x70cm prints hung 5-8cm apart also hit that target.

For a two-seater or loveseat (around 160cm), go for a single 60x80cm print or a 50x70cm. Anything smaller floats and looks lost. Bigger and you crowd the back cushions.

Which Morris designs work above a sofa

Flowing patterns like Willow Bough and Pimpernel suit longer horizontal arrangements. They have a calm, repeating rhythm that doesn't fight your sofa lines. Denser designs like Strawberry Thief and Snakeshead are better as single hero pieces, because the eye needs space around them to actually read the pattern.

If your sofa is patterned or velvet, pick a Morris print with a tighter palette and let the colour do the talking. If your sofa is plain (which most modern sofas are), you can go bolder with the print. Our living room wall art collection has more pairing ideas if you want to see how this plays out across furniture styles.

Pairing with contemporary furniture

Morris prints sit surprisingly well with mid-century walnut, light oak Scandi furniture and even modular sofas in neutral fabrics. The shared thread is natural materials. Where it gets harder is high-gloss, chrome or anything aggressively contemporary. In that case, lean towards Morris designs with simpler line work (Marigold, Acanthus outlines) rather than the heavily floral ones.

Bedroom: the best Morris prints for calm, restful walls

The bedroom is where pattern choice really matters. You want something you can wake up to without feeling visually shouted at. The best William Morris prints for bedroom walls are the softer, more open designs: Willow Bough, Jasmine, Fruit, and the paler colourways of Honeysuckle.

Avoid Strawberry Thief on the wall directly opposite the bed. It's a stunning design, but it's busy enough that your brain doesn't fully switch off. Save it for the wall behind your headboard, where you won't actually see it from bed.

Sizing above a bed

For a king bed (150cm wide), aim for 100 to 120cm of art. A single 70x100cm portrait print centred above the headboard works, or a pair of 50x70cm prints side by side. For a double (135cm), a 60x80cm single print sits well. Hang the bottom edge 15 to 25cm above the headboard, not higher. Floating art near the ceiling is the most common bedroom mistake.

Bedroom colour pairings

Morris's natural palettes pair beautifully with chalky, muted modern paint colours. Willow Bough in the original sage and cream sits gorgeously against Farrow & Ball Cromarty or Little Greene French Grey Pale. The dusty pink Honeysuckle works with Setting Plaster or a soft warm white like Slaked Lime. Avoid pure brilliant white, it makes the prints look like they're hovering rather than belonging.

A serene bedroom with a 70x100cm framed Willow Bough print above a low wooden headboard, white linen bedding, a small ceramic lamp on a bedside table and soft morning light through linen curtains

Hallways and staircases: making an impact in small or narrow spaces

Narrow hallways are where Morris earns its keep. You walk through quickly, so a bit of pattern intensity is exactly right. This is the one place we'd say go denser: Strawberry Thief, Snakeshead, Acanthus.

For a standard hallway (around 90cm wide), portrait orientation prints in 30x40cm or 50x70cm work best. Hang them at 145-150cm to the centre of the print, which is the standard gallery eye-line. Two or three prints in a row along one wall, evenly spaced, beats a single print floating in the middle.

Staircases

Follow the line of the stairs. Hang prints in a stepped formation, parallel to the bannister, with the centre of each print 145cm above the nose of the stair below. Mix sizes if you want movement: a 50x70cm anchoring the bottom, smaller 30x40cm prints stepping up. Keep frame colour consistent so the variety doesn't tip into chaos.

Colour matching: pairing Morris prints with contemporary paint and furniture

Generic "warm tones" advice is useless. Here's what actually pairs.

Strawberry Thief (indigo and red): Farrow & Ball Stiffkey Blue on a single feature wall, or Plummett for a softer take. With furniture, lean into walnut, brass and unbleached linen. Avoid grey, which makes the indigo look dirty.

Willow Bough (sage and cream): Little Greene Aquamarine Pale, Farrow & Ball Mizzle, or Pigeon. Pairs beautifully with light oak, rattan and natural wool. This is the most forgiving Morris colourway.

Pimpernel (olive and terracotta): Farrow & Ball Treron or Card Room Green. Works with tan leather, dark walnut and warm metals. Don't pair with cool greys.

Honeysuckle (pink and ochre): Setting Plaster, Templeton Pink or Little Greene Hammock. Soft, romantic, sits well with cream boucle and pale pine.

Acanthus (deep greens and golds): Inchyra Blue, Studio Green or Bancha if you're brave. Big rich palette, needs equally confident furniture: dark wood, deep velvet, brass.

A general rule: pull one colour from the print and use it on the wall behind, but go two shades lighter than your instinct. Morris designs are saturated, so the wall needs to recede.

Framed vs canvas: which finish suits which room

This matters more than people realise. Morris designs were originally printed in fine detail, so the substrate changes how they read.

Framed prints on matte paper preserve every line of the original. The detail is sharper, the colours sit truer, and a good frame elevates the design from "pretty pattern" to "considered piece of art." We use solid FSC wood frames with UV-protective acrylic glaze, which keeps the colours from fading even on a sun-facing wall. For living rooms, bedrooms and hallways, framed is almost always the right call.

Canvas works better in two specific scenarios: kitchens and bathrooms where humidity is higher, and rooms where you want a softer, less formal look. Canvas takes the edge off pattern density. A Strawberry Thief canvas reads warmer and more textural than the same design framed behind acrylic. The trade-off is you lose some of the fine line detail.

A note on quality: the biggest failure point with art prints is poor framing. Frames shipped separately, warped mounts, prints that bubble within a month. If you're investing in a piece you want to live with, look for prints that arrive properly fitted in one box, ready to hang. Otherwise you've spent good money on something that looks tired in a season.

A narrow hallway with three vertically oriented framed William Morris prints in dark walnut frames hung in a row, a console table with a brass lamp and a ceramic vase below, parquet flooring

Common styling mistakes (and how to avoid them)

Mistake 1: Matching Morris with Morris with Morris. A Morris print, a Morris cushion, a Morris lampshade and Morris curtains is how you get the gift shop look. Pick one Morris element per room. Two if they're in different colourways and far apart.

Mistake 2: Tiny prints on big walls. A 30x40cm print above a three-seater sofa looks apologetic. Match the scale of the print to the scale of the wall and furniture. When in doubt, go bigger.

Mistake 3: Ornate frames. Gold rococo frames on Morris prints push everything into period drama. Stick with clean profiles: black, white, natural oak or walnut. Let the print do the work.

Mistake 4: Hanging too high. The centre of your art should sit at 145-150cm from the floor, or 15-25cm above furniture. Most people hang 10-15cm too high.

Mistake 5: Refusing to mix styles. Morris prints actually look brilliant alongside black and white photography, modern abstracts and even line drawings. The contrast modernises the Morris and the Morris warms up the contemporary pieces. If you're building a gallery wall, use a Morris print as the anchor and surround it with two or three pieces from your vintage art prints or botanical art prints collections, mixed with something more graphic.

Mistake 6: Ignoring lighting. Busy patterns disappear under harsh overhead lighting and come alive under warmer, directional light. A small picture light or a nearby table lamp at 2700K transforms a Morris print after dark.

Our top five William Morris prints for first-time buyers

If you're just starting out, these are the designs that are hardest to get wrong.

1. Willow Bough. The gateway Morris. Calm, flowing, works in almost any room. Best in 50x70cm or 70x100cm framed in light oak. Pair with neutrals and you're done.

2. Strawberry Thief. The icon. Demands to be a hero piece. Best as a single large framed print (70x100cm) above a sofa or bed. Don't surround it with other busy elements.

3. Pimpernel. Slightly less famous, which works in its favour. Beautiful in warmer rooms with tan leather or terracotta accents. Looks particularly good in 60x80cm.

4. Honeysuckle. Softest of the lot. Brilliant in bedrooms, nurseries or any room you want to feel restful. The pink and ochre palette pairs effortlessly with modern neutrals.

5. Marigold. Underrated. Simpler line work than the floral designs, almost graphic in feel. The easiest Morris to slot into a contemporary scheme, especially in a black frame against a white wall.

A modern eclectic gallery wall with a large framed William Morris Pimpernel print as the anchor, surrounded by smaller black and white photography prints and a small botanical illustration, hung above a mid-century walnut sideboard

Where to start

If you've never bought a Morris print before, start with one piece in your living room or bedroom. Buy bigger than you think you need, frame it properly, and hang it lower than feels natural. Live with it for a month before adding anything else. That's how you build a room that feels like Morris belongs there, not like Morris arrived in a delivery van last week.

A gentle English farmhouse kitchen in late summer evening golden light flooding through an open garden door at the left, casting long honeyed shadows across quarry tiles in deep red-brown. The walls are soft cream — the colour of clotted cream — slightly uneven where old plaster shows through. Three provided framed art prints hang in a horizontal row on the wall above a rustic pine kitchen table: the gaps between frames are equal at 6cm, top edges aligned in a straight line, the centre print centred above the table. The pine table is worn and characterful, its surface bearing decades of gentle use with one visible ring stain. On the table, a ceramic jug in cream holds fresh garden roses — pink David Austins, slightly blown open, two petals fallen onto the table surface. Beside it, a wooden bread board leans against the wall, a few crumbs caught in its grain. An old brass set of kitchen scales sits at the table's far end with three brown eggs in the pan, one egg with a tiny feather stuck to its shell. A wicker basket rests on the floor beneath the table, a checked linen cloth spilling over one edge. Open shelving to the right displays stoneware in cream and blue, a vintage enamel colander with sprigs of fresh rosemary. The camera frames straight-on at medium distance, shallow depth of field softening the garden door while the prints and table remain sharp. The mood is the last warm evening of August, when the kitchen door stays open until dark.

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