ROOM BY ROOM

The Bedroom Finishing Guide: Art, Scale, and Light

Why finishing a bedroom is a conversation between artwork, proportion, and the light that moves across your walls.

Jasmine Okoro
JASMINE OKORO
June 9, 2026
The Bedroom Finishing Guide: Art, Scale, and Light

Most bedrooms get decorated, but very few get finished. The difference is not how much you put on the walls, it is whether the art, the scale of your furniture, and the way light moves through the room are working together. This guide treats those three things as one system, because that is how a bedroom actually reads when you walk into it.

Decorating vs finishing: the distinction that changes everything

A decorated bedroom has things in it. A duvet, a rug, maybe a print above the bed. A finished bedroom feels resolved. You cannot point to what is missing, because nothing is.

The reason this matters: art is almost always the element that closes the gap. Furniture sets the proportions. Light sets the mood. Art is the thing that ties them together and tells your eye where to rest. If you skip it, or you get the scale wrong, the room reads as unfinished no matter how nice the bedding is.

So before you start browsing prints, do an audit. Walk into your bedroom and ask three questions. What are the dominant proportions (bed width, ceiling height, window placement)? Where does light enter, and when? Where does your eye naturally land when you walk through the door? Those answers shape every art decision that follows.

A calm bedroom with a linen-upholstered bed, soft morning light from a side window, and a single large landscape framed print hung above the headboard in a natural oak frame

The scale rule that actually works

The professional consensus is that art above a piece of furniture should span roughly 60 to 75% of that furniture's width. Above a standard UK double bed (135cm wide), that means art (or a grouping) somewhere between 80cm and 100cm across. Above a king (150cm), you are looking at 90cm to 115cm.

Most people undershoot this. They buy a 40x50cm print, float it above a king bed, and wonder why the wall feels empty. The print is not the problem. The proportion is.

If you want a single statement piece above the bed, go bigger than feels safe. A 70x100cm framed print or a 100x150cm canvas reads as intentional. A 30x40cm print reads as forgotten.

When to go horizontal, when to go vertical

Horizontal art (landscape orientation) sits beautifully above a bed because it mirrors the horizontal line of the headboard. It calms the eye. This is the safest, most restful choice for the wall behind your bed.

Vertical art works better on narrow walls, beside wardrobes, or in pairs flanking a window. It draws the eye upward, which is useful in rooms with low ceilings (under 2.4m) because it makes the wall feel taller.

If your ceiling is tall (2.7m and up), you have more freedom. A vertical piece above the bed can work, but you may want to pair it with a second piece, or hang it lower than instinct tells you, so it does not float in space.

Eye level, and the mistake almost everyone makes

The standard professional guideline is to hang the centre of any artwork at 145 to 152cm from the floor. Gallery hangers use the lower end of that range. It is where the average adult eye lands naturally.

Above a bed, this rule shifts. You are not standing in front of the headboard, you are looking at the wall from across the room. The centre of the art should sit 20 to 25cm above the top of the headboard. Any higher and it floats. Any lower and it crowds the pillows.

A test: lie on the bed and look up. If the bottom edge of the print is in your peripheral vision, it is too low. If you have to crane your neck to see it from the doorway, it is too high.

Light: the variable nobody talks about

Here is the thing most bedroom art guides miss entirely. The same print looks like three different prints depending on the light hitting it at 8am, 2pm, and 9pm. If you choose art without considering this, you are choosing blind.

Start by mapping your bedroom's light. Which way do the windows face? North-facing rooms get cool, even, indirect light all day. South-facing rooms get warm, strong, shifting light. East-facing rooms are bright in the morning, soft by evening. West-facing rooms are the opposite.

Now think about when you actually see your bedroom. If you spend most waking hours in there in the evening, your art needs to hold up under warm artificial light, not under the bright morning sun you only see for ten minutes before work.

Avoiding glare without overthinking it

Direct sunlight on a framed piece can cause two problems: visible glare on the glazing, and (over years) colour fade in cheaper prints. The first is solved by hanging art on walls that receive indirect light rather than direct beams. The wall opposite a window gets light without getting hit by it.

The second is a real concern with poorly made framed prints. Decent framing uses UV-protective acrylic glazing rather than ordinary glass, which prevents fading even in sunny rooms. Museum-grade giclée inks (the kind we use on our art prints) are rated to last for centuries even in direct sunlight, so a south-facing bedroom is not a reason to avoid framed art. It is a reason to be choosier about how the art is made.

Layered lighting and where art fits

A finished bedroom usually has three light sources: ambient (ceiling or wall light), task (bedside lamps), and accent (something that draws the eye, like a picture light or a floor lamp angled at a wall).

Art interacts with all three. Ambient light reveals it. Task light shapes the warmth of the room around it. Accent light, if you have it, can turn a single print into the room's focal point after dark. Even without a dedicated picture light, a tall floor lamp positioned near your art will give it presence in the evening.

If your bedroom is dimly lit, lean toward art with strong contrast or warm tones. Subtle, low-contrast pieces disappear in low light. If your bedroom is flooded with daylight, you can use quieter, more tonal pieces (botanical studies, soft abstracts, monochrome photography) because the light itself is doing the work.

A bedroom with two vertical framed prints flanking a tall window, late afternoon light raking across the wall, white bedlinen and a sage green throw

Bedroom wall art ideas, by wall

Not every wall in a bedroom should be treated the same. Here is how we think about it.

The wall behind the bed

This is the anchor wall. It should hold the most weight, visually. A single large piece (70x100cm framed, or 100x150cm on canvas) is the cleanest, most restful choice. Two matching pieces side by side, with 5 to 8cm of space between them, give a similar effect with a touch more rhythm.

Bedrooms benefit from quieter art behind the bed. You do not want to lie down at night staring at something demanding. Landscapes, abstracts with soft tonal shifts, botanical illustrations, and atmospheric photography all sit well here. Browse our landscape prints if you want a starting point.

The wall opposite the bed

This is the wall you see first when you walk in, and the last thing you look at before sleep. It can carry more visual energy than the headboard wall. Portraits, more saturated colour, slightly larger scale, or a tight gallery wall all work here.

If you have a chest of drawers or a chair against this wall, apply the 60 to 75% rule to that piece of furniture rather than the wall itself.

The side walls

These are often forgotten. A single vertical print between the window and the wardrobe, or a small framed piece above a bedside table, finishes the room in a way that a single piece above the bed cannot. Small art (30x40cm, 40x50cm) works here. It does not need to be a statement, it needs to be considered.

Calm vs energising: matching art to the room you want

Bedroom art is almost always quieter than living room art, but quiet does not mean beige.

For a restful bedroom, look for: muted palettes (sage, dusty blue, terracotta, warm grey), soft edges, organic subject matter (water, sky, plants, light through fabric), and lower contrast. These pieces let your nervous system settle.

For a more energising bedroom (often what people want in smaller flats where the bedroom doubles as a dressing/reading space), you can use: deeper colours, stronger graphic compositions, photography with clear focal points, and more contrast. The key is balance. One strong piece in an energising palette will lift a room. Three competing pieces will exhaust it.

Our abstract art prints cover both ends of this spectrum, but the principle is the same: pick the mood first, then pick the piece.

Gallery walls in bedrooms: usually a no, sometimes a yes

The honest answer: gallery walls usually do not work above beds. They create visual noise in the one place you want visual quiet, and the alignment becomes fussy because the headboard takes up so much of the bottom edge.

Where they do work in bedrooms: the wall opposite the bed, the wall behind a desk or reading chair, the wall above a low chest of drawers.

If you want a gallery wall, here are the numbers. Keep 5 to 8cm between frames. Treat the whole grouping as one shape and apply the 60 to 75% rule to that shape. Mix sizes but keep frame finishes consistent (all oak, or all black) so the grouping reads as deliberate rather than collected.

A bedroom corner with a vintage chest of drawers and a small considered gallery wall of four framed prints in matching oak frames, a brass lamp casting warm light

Framed or unframed: which suits a bedroom

Both work. Here is how we think about it.

Framed prints feel more finished, more permanent, more considered. They suit bedrooms with traditional or layered interiors, anywhere you want the art to feel like part of the architecture. The trade-off is weight. A 70x100cm framed piece needs proper fixings, especially on plasterboard walls.

Canvas prints are lighter, have no glazing (so no glare at all), and read as softer and more relaxed. They suit minimalist or coastal bedrooms, rooms with a lot of texture already (linen, wood, wool), and bedrooms in older houses with uneven walls where a frame would draw attention to the wonk. Our canvas prints go up to 100x150cm, which is the right scale for a king-size headboard wall.

One thing worth flagging: poorly made framed prints are the single biggest disappointment in the wall art category. Warped MDF frames, prints that arrive separately and have to be assembled, paper that bubbles inside the frame within months. If you go framed, make sure it ships ready to hang with the print properly fitted inside a solid wood frame, not stapled into something flat-pack.

The step-back test, and how to commit

Before you order, do this. Cut a piece of paper or cardboard to the exact dimensions you are considering. Tape it to the wall at the right height. Step back to the doorway. Look at it for a full minute.

If it feels small from the doorway, go up a size. If it feels right but a little timid, go up a size. People almost never regret going bigger. They regularly regret going smaller.

Then leave the paper up for a day. Look at it in morning light, afternoon light, evening light, lamp light. If it still feels right, that is your size.

A finishing checklist

Walk through this before you order anything.

  1. Have you measured the wall and the furniture beneath it, and chosen art that spans 60 to 75% of that width?
  2. Will the centre of the art sit 145 to 152cm from the floor, or 20 to 25cm above the headboard?
  3. Have you considered which way the windows face, and how the light moves across that wall through the day?
  4. Does the mood of the piece match the mood you want from the room (restful or energising)?
  5. Have you tested the size with paper on the wall before committing?

If those five answers line up, the room will feel finished when the art goes up. Not decorated. Finished. That is the whole point.

A serene bedroom with warm white walls bearing a subtle plaster texture — lime-washed, slightly imperfect — and dark walnut wide plank flooring providing the single contrast in an otherwise pale room. A single provided framed art print is centred above a low platform bed with a pale ash headboard, clean-lined and Japanese-influenced. The bed is dressed in natural undyed linen, barely rumpled. On a simple ash stool serving as a nightstand, a single ceramic bud vase — handmade, asymmetric, in matte off-white — holds one stem of dried honesty, its translucent seed pods catching light. Beside it, a narrow wooden tray holds a single white espresso cup, placed deliberately. At the foot of the bed, a natural jute rug softens the dark walnut floor. The room is almost empty — negative space is the defining feature. A single window casts soft overcast light, even and meditative, the quality of a Japanese interior at dawn — no drama, no hard shadows, just quiet grey-white illumination making the single art print the room's clear focal point. The camera is straight-on, considered, with deep depth of field keeping everything in sharp focus. The mood is the kind of silence you choose, not the kind you endure. A gentle nursery in a country home with pale lavender walls — barely there, like the memory of dried flowers — and old pine board flooring with visible knots and warm golden patina. Two provided framed art prints hang as a horizontal pair above a white-painted wooden cot with turned spindles, mounted securely — the two prints side by side with a 5-8cm gap between inner frame edges, vertically centre-aligned, the pair as a unit centred above the cot. A cream-painted rocking chair with a linen cushion in soft oatmeal sits in the corner, a woven basket on the floor beside it holding a rolled cellular blanket. On low painted shelving at child height, a ceramic jug in cream holds fresh sweet peas in pale pink and white, one bloom slightly drooping, a single petal fallen onto the shelf surface. Beside the jug, a stack of three vintage children's books with worn cloth spines in faded blue and green leans gently to one side. Overcast day light fills the room — soft, even, gentle grey — while the warm tones of the pine floor and cream paint provide all the warmth the scene needs. The camera is straight-on with slight angle, medium framing, and shallow depth of field softening the rocking chair behind. The mood is the particular tenderness of a room prepared for someone very small and very loved.

Produits Fab présentés dans cet article


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