How do I pick maximalist art prints as a gift when I don't know the person's exact taste?
Go for prints with rich colour and layered detail rather than trying to guess a specific subject. Bold colourful wall art with botanical, architectural, or abstract pattern motifs tends to land well because it feels curated without being niche. A framed 40x50cm print is the sweet spot for gifts: it's statement enough to matter but doesn't overwhelm if they need to find the right wall. Our prints arrive ready to hang with solid wood framing and proper fitting, so the recipient doesn't need to faff around at a framer's.
Can I mix prints from this collection with art I already own?
Absolutely, and honestly maximalist wall decor only gets better when it clashes a little. The trick is to connect pieces through one shared element: a recurring colour, a similar frame finish, or a consistent print size. If your existing art is warm-toned, pull in prints here that have at least a thread of ochre, terracotta, or red and let the subjects vary wildly. Our frames come in black, white, and natural wood, so matching your current setup is straightforward.
What size works best for creating a bold, maximalist look on a large blank wall?
For a single statement piece above a sofa or sideboard, go 70x100cm. It fills the space properly and lets the detail and colour of eclectic art prints really sing. If you want a gallery wall instead, start with one 50x70cm print as an anchor and surround it with three or four smaller pieces (30x40cm or 40x50cm) in a loose, asymmetric arrangement. Maximalism rewards going bigger than you think you need to, so if you're torn between two sizes, size up.
Will these vibrant prints fade quickly in a sunny room?
No. Our framed prints use UV-protective acrylic glazing and museum-grade giclée inks rated to last hundreds of years, even in direct sunlight. So that south-facing living room with the big blank wall above the fireplace is exactly where vibrant art prints for walls should go. The matte paper and acrylic glaze also mean zero glare, which matters in bright rooms where glass-fronted frames can turn into mirrors.
How is maximalist style different from just having too much stuff on the walls?
Maximalist interior design is deliberate abundance. The difference is curation: choosing bold pattern art prints, layered colour, and varied subjects that share some connective thread, whether that's palette, energy, or theme. A wall covered in random posters with blu-tack is clutter. A wall covered in beautifully framed prints at different scales, hung with intention, is maximalism. The framing quality matters enormously here because cheap frames make a busy wall look chaotic, while solid wood frames with proper fitting give even the most eclectic arrangement a sense of cohesion.
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