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Which flower art prints work best in a bedroom?
Soft, muted florals in blush, sage, or dusty blue tones are our top pick for bedrooms. They bring warmth without competing with your sleep space. A single framed flower print in 50x70cm above a headboard gives you a finished, considered look without overwhelming the wall. If your bedding is neutral, go bolder with a painterly peony or dahlia. If your room already has pattern, a simple botanical study on a white background calms everything down.
How big should a flower print be for my living room wall?
For the wall above a standard sofa (roughly 180-200cm wide), we'd go with a single large flower art print at 70x100cm or a pair of 50x70cm prints spaced about 5cm apart. A print that's too small will look like an afterthought, so err on the side of bigger. Our framed prints arrive ready to hang with all fixtures attached, so you're not messing around trying to fit a frame yourself and ending up with something wonky on the wall.
Are floral prints still in style, or do they look dated?
Floral prints are absolutely still in style, but the ones people are reaching for now look nothing like your nan's wallpaper. Modern floral prints lean into oversized blooms, moody dark backgrounds, abstract petal studies, and vintage botanical illustrations with a contemporary twist. The trick is in the framing and presentation. Our solid wood frames in black or natural oak give even a classic flower painting a clean, current feel. If you want to play it safe, wildflower prints and loose watercolour florals are the most versatile option right now.
How do I mix different flower prints without it looking chaotic?
Pick a shared colour thread. Two or three floral art prints will sit happily together if they share at least one dominant tone, even if the styles are completely different. A vintage botanical study next to a loose watercolour peony works beautifully when both lean into the same greens or pinks. Keep frames consistent (all black or all natural wood) and stick to the same print size for a gallery set. The 3-5-7 rule from interior design applies here: odd numbers of prints always look more intentional than even.
Are botanical prints and flower prints the same thing?
There's overlap, but they're not identical. Botanical art prints tend to be more scientific and illustrative, showing the whole plant with leaves, stems, roots, and sometimes Latin names. Think vintage herbarium pages or detailed scientific drawings. Flower prints are broader and include everything from abstract petal close-ups to impressionist bouquets to moody Dutch master-style arrangements. If you're after a classic, timeless look for a study or hallway, botanical prints are hard to beat. For something with more colour and drama in a living room or bedroom, broader floral wall art prints give you more range to play with.