Couch Art Prints

Transform your lounging space into a true reflection of you with our Couch Art Prints. These pieces are more than just décor; they're a personal statement that turns your living room into a canvas of self-expression. Without the need for renovations, add vibrancy and warmth to your home effortlessly and affordably. Made to order, framed to perfection, and ready to hang, these prints distinguish your space from the ordinary, making it truly yours.
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Dog Eating Pizza Art Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From €19,95 €33,25

Cozy Cat & Pizza Art Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From €19,95 €33,25

Poodle Pizza Delight Art Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From €19,95 €33,25

Cozy Cat Pizza Night Art Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From €19,95 €33,25

Cozy Canine Delight Art Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From €19,95 €33,25

Cozy Cat Vibes Art Print

Translation missing: en.products.product.sale_price From €19,95 €33,25

More Fab art curations

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 big should art prints be above my couch?

Your art should cover roughly two-thirds the width of your sofa. That's the 2/3 rule, and it genuinely works every time. For a standard three-seater (around 200cm wide), a single large wall art print at 70x100cm hits the sweet spot. If you're hanging two or three prints to hang above your couch instead, keep the total grouping within that two-thirds boundary and leave about 5cm between each frame. Go narrower than two-thirds and the art looks like an afterthought floating on the wall.

How high should I hang art prints above my sofa?

The bottom edge of the frame should sit 15 to 20cm above the top of your sofa back. That's it. Anything higher and the art feels disconnected, like it's drifting up the wall with no relation to the furniture below. If you have high ceilings and worry it looks low, trust the gap anyway. The visual link between the art and the sofa is what makes the whole wall feel intentional. Our framed prints arrive with fixtures already attached, so once you've measured, you're minutes from done.

Should I choose one large print or a set of prints above my couch?

One large art print above your couch is the easiest way to make a blank wall feel finished, and we think it's the strongest choice for most living rooms. A single 70x100cm framed print creates an immediate focal point without any fiddly spacing or levelling. Gallery walls with 2 or 3 prints work well if your sofa is extra wide (over 220cm) or you want a more curated, collected feel, but they take more planning. If you just want to solve that empty wall and move on with your life, go big and go singular.

Do horizontal or vertical art prints work better above a sofa?

Horizontal wall art for sofas wins almost every time. A landscape-oriented print echoes the long, low line of your couch and makes the arrangement feel balanced and deliberate. Vertical prints can look awkward solo above a wide sofa because they leave too much empty wall on either side. The exception is if you're hanging a pair or trio of vertical prints as a set. For a single statement piece, choose a horizontal print and your wall will look like someone who knows what they're doing put it together.

What style of art works best above a couch in a living room?

It depends less on the 'style' and more on tying together what's already in the room. Look at your cushions, rug, and any existing accent colours, then pick living room wall art above your sofa that pulls out one or two of those tones. Abstract prints with warm neutrals are a safe bet for modern spaces, while botanical or landscape art prints suit rooms with natural textures like linen and wood. Avoid anything too small or too busy. The wall above your sofa is the most prominent spot in the room, so it should anchor the space, not compete with everything else in it.