Bold Scandinavian Blooms Art Print
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From €16,95
€23,95
Poppy Power Scandinavian Art Print
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From €16,95
€23,95
Italian Tomato Cluster Art Print
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From €16,95
€23,95
Modern Minimalist Bloom Art Print
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From €16,95
€23,95
Bold Scandi Blooms Art Print
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From €16,95
€23,95
Italian Tomato Cluster Art Print
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From €16,95
€23,95
Italian Tomato Cluster Art Print
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From €16,95
€23,95
Peach Grove Linework Art Print
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From €16,95
€23,95
Italian Tomato Cluster Art Print
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€23,95
Soft Botanical Stripes Art Print
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€23,95
Spring Blooms by the Sea Art Print
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€23,95
White Ranunculus Bouquet Art Print
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€23,95
Pastel Gathering Table Art Print
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From €16,95
€23,95
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 should I frame botanical art prints so they actually look good?
Honestly, framing is where most botanical prints fall flat. Cheap frames warp, prints bubble, and the whole thing ends up looking like a dentist's waiting room. Our botanical art prints arrive ready to hang in solid FSC-certified wood frames with UV-protective acrylic glazing, so colours stay true even in a sunny conservatory or south-facing living room. We'd recommend a natural oak frame for vintage botanical illustration prints and a clean black frame if you're going for a more modern, graphic leaf look. No assembly, no trips to the framer, no regrets.
Are botanical prints still in style, or have they had their moment?
Botanical prints have been on walls since the 18th century, so calling them a trend feels a bit generous to trends. What's shifted is how people use them. Right now, oversized single botanical leaf prints in a minimal frame are replacing the more traditional grid-of-four approach. They work beautifully in modern, Scandi, and japandi interiors, and they're one of the few art subjects that genuinely suit every room from a hallway to a bedroom. If anything, they're more popular now than five years ago.
Which botanical prints work best in a bedroom?
For a bedroom, you want something calming rather than busy. We'd steer you toward a single large botanical print (60x80cm or bigger) in soft greens or muted tones, hung centrally above the headboard. Tropical plant prints with bold monstera or palm leaves can feel a bit energetic for a sleep space. Instead, look for fern studies, eucalyptus, or olive branch illustrations. The matte paper we print on has zero glare, which matters more in bedrooms than people realise since you're often viewing art from a low angle with side lighting.
How do I create a botanical gallery wall without it looking cluttered?
The trick is to limit yourself. Pick three botanical art prints in the same colour family and vary the sizes: one larger piece (50x70cm) flanked by two smaller ones (30x40cm) works brilliantly above a sofa or console table. Keep the frames consistent, stick to the same style of illustration (don't mix vintage botanical prints with photographic plant art), and leave 5-7cm between each frame. This reads as intentional rather than chaotic. A set of botanical prints in matching frames is the fastest way to make a blank wall feel finished.
What's the difference between botanical prints and floral prints?
Floral prints are decorative; they're about beauty, pattern, and colour. Botanical prints have roots (literally) in scientific illustration, so they tend to show the whole plant, including leaves, stems, seeds, and sometimes root systems, with real attention to anatomical accuracy. That's why botanical art prints often feel more sophisticated and less 'country cottage' than florals. Vintage botanical prints draw directly from centuries of scientific cataloguing, while modern botanical leaf prints lean more minimal and graphic. Both live under the plant wall art umbrella, but they set a very different tone in a room.












