Fab’s Traditional Japanese Art Prints add elegance, balance, and beauty to living rooms, bedrooms, hallways, and study spaces. From iconic landscapes to delicate details, each piece brings calm sophistication and lasting style to your home.
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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.
Which traditional Japanese art prints work best for a living room feature wall?
For a living room, we'd go with a large-format Japanese landscape print or a Hokusai wave print at 70x100cm. That size sits beautifully above a standard sofa and gives the artwork enough breathing room to actually feel like the statement it deserves to be. Subjects like Mount Fuji, crashing waves, or sweeping cherry blossom scenes have enough visual depth and movement to anchor a whole room. Our framed prints arrive ready to hang with UV-protective acrylic glazing, so even if your sofa sits near a window you won't see fading over time.
Are these good enough quality to give as a gift, or will they look cheap in person?
Honestly, this is where we really shine. Our traditional Japanese art prints are giclée-printed on thick museum-grade matte paper, and the framing uses solid FSC-certified wood, not MDF or veneers. We hear constantly from customers that the prints look even better in person than on screen. If you're gifting, choose a framed option because it arrives fully fitted and ready to hang in one box, no assembly required, no separate frame to wrestle with. A framed ukiyo-e art print in the 40x50cm or 50x70cm range makes a genuinely impressive gift.
Can I pair Japanese prints with modern or minimalist interiors, or will they clash?
Traditional Japanese art prints are one of the most natural fits for minimalist spaces we can think of. The clean compositions, restrained colour palettes, and focus on negative space in ukiyo-e and Japanese landscape prints mirror exactly what minimalist design is trying to achieve. A single cherry blossom print or a muted Hiroshige landscape in a slim black frame on a white or warm grey wall looks effortlessly intentional. We'd avoid going smaller than 50x70cm in a minimal room though, because small prints on big empty walls just look like an afterthought.
How do I choose between a wave print, cherry blossom, or Mount Fuji scene?
Think about the energy of the room you're decorating. A Japanese wave print like Hokusai's Great Wave brings drama and movement, perfect for a space that needs a focal point, like a living room or hallway. Japanese cherry blossom prints are softer and more meditative, which makes them ideal for bedrooms or reading nooks. A Mount Fuji art print sits somewhere in between: grounding, calm, but still visually commanding. If you have a blank wall that feels flat and lifeless, the wave is your best bet. If the room already has plenty going on and you want something that settles it, cherry blossom.
Why do traditional Japanese prints still look so contemporary hundreds of years later?
Ukiyo-e artists like Hokusai and Hiroshige were obsessed with bold flat colour, dynamic composition, and nature as subject matter, all things that modern graphic design and contemporary interiors still draw from heavily. That's why vintage Japanese prints don't feel dated on a wall the way, say, a fussy Victorian oil painting might. The graphic clarity of Japanese woodblock prints means they hold their own next to modern furniture, concrete, and clean lines. It's not a coincidence that these prints are more popular now than they've ever been in Western homes.
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