Bedroom Wall Art Guide: Styles, Sizes & Placement
The Complete Guide to Bedroom Wall Art: Sizing, Styles, and Where to Hang It
A blank wall above your bed is one of the easiest places to make a room feel unfinished. The right art transforms it into a space that actually feels like yours.
Getting there comes down to three things: picking the right size, choosing a style that fits your vibe, and hanging it where it actually looks intentional. This guide walks you through all of it.
Why the right size wall art makes or breaks your bedroom
Here's the quick answer: bedroom wall art works best when it spans about two-thirds the width of your furniture below, hangs 6-12 inches above your headboard, and matches your room's overall mood. Get those three things right, and your space instantly feels more intentional.
Size is where most people trip up. A small print floating above a king bed looks like an afterthought, while a properly scaled piece anchors the whole room. The difference between "something feels off" and "this looks great" often comes down to proportion.
Standard wall art sizes for bedroom spaces
Before measuring anything, it helps to know the common size categories you'll see when shopping.
Small bedroom wall art
Pieces under 16 inches work well in compact spaces, as part of gallery walls, or in accent spots like above a nightstand. They add personality without overwhelming a smaller room.
Medium bedroom wall art
The 16-24 inch range offers flexibility. Prints in this size work above dressers, as pairs flanking a window, or grouped together for more visual weight.
Large bedroom wall art
Pieces between 24-40 inches hit the sweet spot for most bedrooms. This is typically the right size for hanging above a queen or king bed as a single statement.
Oversized statement pieces
Anything larger than 40 inches creates drama in spacious primary bedrooms with high ceilings or wide walls. At this scale, the art becomes the room's focal point.
How to choose the perfect wall art size for your bedroom
Finding the right size is simpler than it seems. A few steps get you there.
1. Measure your available wall space
Grab a tape measure and note the width and height of the wall area where you're planning to hang art. This gives you your maximum boundaries to work within.
2. Match art width to your furniture
Art looks best when it relates visually to what's beneath it. A piece above your bed, dresser, or nightstand creates a cohesive look when the widths feel connected rather than random.
3. Apply the two-thirds rule
Here's the simplest guideline: your art's width works best at roughly two-thirds the width of the furniture below. So for a 60-inch wide headboard, art around 40 inches wide feels balanced.
4. Factor in your room's proportions
Small bedrooms benefit from restraint. One well-chosen piece often beats multiple smaller ones. Larger rooms can handle bolder, oversized art that might overwhelm a cozier space.
Best bedroom wall art styles for every aesthetic
Your bedroom's personality guides which art styles feel right. Here's what works for the most popular looks.
Modern and contemporary bedroom art
Clean lines, abstract forms, and graphic prints define this style. Think bold geometric shapes, minimalist compositions, and art that feels fresh without being fussy.
Soft and romantic bedroom art
Florals, muted palettes, and dreamy landscapes create a gentle atmosphere. Soft edges and colors that whisper rather than shout characterize this look.
Bohemian bedroom art
An eclectic mix of natural motifs, warm earthy tones, and collected-over-time energy works here. Desert landscapes, botanical illustrations, and sun-drenched scenes all fit beautifully.
Minimalist bedroom art
Simple compositions, limited color palettes, and generous white space let pieces breathe. One perfectly chosen print can say everything.
Bold and maximalist bedroom art
Vibrant color, large-scale patterns, and expressive pieces bring energy. Maximalist rooms embrace the "more is more" philosophy with confidence.
How bedroom art colors affect mood and sleep
The bedroom is unique. It's where you start and end each day, which makes color particularly relevant here.
Calming tones for restful sleep
Blues, soft greens, and lavenders lower visual stimulation. They help signal to your brain that it's time to wind down.
Warm palettes for cozy bedrooms
Terracotta, blush, and warm neutrals create intimacy. They're especially effective in bedrooms that feel too stark or cold.
Cool hues for serene spaces
Grays, icy blues, and sage create a tranquil, spa-like atmosphere. They work particularly well in bedrooms with lots of natural light.
Neutral colors for effortless versatility
Black, white, beige, and taupe work with virtually any décor. They're the flexible choice when you change your bedding seasonally or haven't committed to a color scheme yet.
Canvas vs framed prints for bedroom walls
Both formats create distinctly different effects.
| Feature | Canvas prints | Framed prints |
|---|---|---|
| Look | Casual, gallery-style | Polished, intentional |
| Texture | Visible canvas weave | Smooth, clean surface |
| Best for | Bohemian, casual spaces | Modern, traditional rooms |
Framed prints tend to feel more finished. They signal that thought went into the choice. Fab's professionally framed pieces arrive ready to hang, which eliminates the extra step and expense of custom framing.
Where to hang wall art in your bedroom
Placement affects how your art interacts with the rest of the room.
Above the bed
This is the most popular spot for good reason. Art above the headboard anchors the room's focal point and gives your eye somewhere to land when you walk in.
Above a dresser or nightstand
Secondary placements add visual interest to other furniture. A print above a dresser creates a mini vignette, especially when paired with a few decorative objects.
On an accent wall
Bedrooms without headboards or with interesting architectural features benefit from art on a side wall. This approach can also balance a room that feels lopsided.
Leaning on a surface
A casual, modern alternative that works on dressers, shelves, or even the floor for oversized pieces. Leaning art feels relaxed and easy to swap out.
How high to hang bedroom wall art
Height is where many people go wrong. Too high, and the art feels disconnected from everything below it.
The eye-level standard
For art that isn't above furniture, center the piece at roughly 57-60 inches from the floor. This puts the middle of the artwork at average eye level.
Above the headboard placement
Art above the bed follows different rules. Hang it about 6-8 inches above your headboard, close enough to feel connected rather than floating in space.
Adjustments for high ceilings
Rooms with tall ceilings can handle art hung slightly higher. The goal is filling the vertical space proportionally without leaving the piece stranded up near the ceiling.
How to create a gallery wall in your bedroom
Gallery walls bring personality, though they require a bit more planning than a single piece.
Selecting pieces that work together
Cohesion comes from shared elements:
- Consistent color palette: Pieces that share two or three colors feel unified even with different subjects
- Matching frame styles: Same frame color or material ties varied art together
- Unifying theme: Botanicals, abstracts, or photography grouped by subject
Fab's gallery wall sets take the guesswork out by curating pieces designed to work together.
Planning your layout before hanging
Lay your pieces on the floor first, or trace them onto paper and tape the templates to your wall. This prevents unnecessary holes and helps you visualize the final arrangement before committing.
Spacing and arrangement guidelines
Keep 2-3 inches between frames for a cohesive look. Grid arrangements feel orderly and modern, while organic layouts feel collected and eclectic.
Bedroom wall art mistakes to avoid
A few common missteps can undermine even beautiful art choices.
- Choosing art that's too small: Undersized pieces look lost above larger furniture. When in doubt, go larger.
- Hanging art too high: Creates a visual disconnect. Art feels grounded when it relates to furniture or sits at eye level.
- Ignoring your existing color palette: Art works best when it complements your bedding and curtains rather than fighting them.
- Overcrowding your walls: Bedrooms benefit from breathing room. Not every wall needs something on it.
How to choose the right frame for bedroom wall art
The frame is part of the art's overall impact.
Black frames for modern bedrooms
Crisp and graphic, black frames work beautifully with contemporary and minimalist aesthetics. They add definition without competing with the art itself.
Natural wood frames for warmth
Oak, walnut, and lighter woods add organic texture. They pair especially well with bohemian, coastal, and Scandinavian styles.
White frames for light and airy spaces
Fresh and clean, white frames keep things feeling open. They're ideal for soft or minimalist bedrooms where you want the art to feel like it's floating.
Make your bedroom walls work for you
Choosing bedroom art doesn't have to feel overwhelming. Start with size, get that right, and everything else falls into place more easily. Match your art to your room's mood, hang it at the right height, and suddenly your bedroom feels like a space you actually designed.
The fastest path from blank wall to finished room? Art that arrives ready to hang. Explore Fab's framed wall art and find pieces that transform your bedroom in minutes.
FAQs about bedroom wall art
How do I hang bedroom wall art without damaging rental walls?
Adhesive strips rated for your art's weight work well for most pieces. Leaning art on a dresser or shelf is another damage-free option that looks intentionally casual.
What size wall art works best for small bedrooms?
One medium-sized statement piece often works better than multiple small ones, which can make a compact room feel cluttered.
Can I mix different wall art styles in one bedroom?
Yes. The key is finding a unifying element like a consistent color palette, matching frames, or a shared mood that ties different styles together.
How do I match wall art with my bedding and curtains?
Pull accent colors from your existing textiles, or choose art in complementary neutrals that won't clash when you change your bedding seasonally.
Produits Fab présentés dans cet article
-
Ensemble d'impressions murales de galerie de formes minimales
Translation missing: fr.products.product.sale_price À partir de £49.95£82.95 -
Ensemble d'impressions murales « Damier Blooms »
Translation missing: fr.products.product.sale_price À partir de £49.95£82.95 -
Ensemble d'impressions murales à rayures
Translation missing: fr.products.product.sale_price À partir de £49.95£82.95 -
Ensemble d'impressions murales de galerie Bold Abstracts
Translation missing: fr.products.product.sale_price À partir de £49.95£82.95 -
Ensemble d'impressions murales de la galerie impressionniste Le Paysage
Translation missing: fr.products.product.sale_price À partir de £49.95£82.95 -
VIDE (Copie) (Copie) (Copie) (Copie) (Copie) (Copie) (Copie)
Translation missing: fr.products.product.sale_price À partir de £11.95£19.95 -
Ensemble d'impressions murales abstraites Folk Faces
Translation missing: fr.products.product.sale_price À partir de £49.95£82.95 -
Affiche typographique His Side noir et blanc
Translation missing: fr.products.product.sale_price À partir de £11.95£19.95 -
VIDE
Translation missing: fr.products.product.sale_price À partir de £24.95£39.95 -
VIDE
Translation missing: fr.products.product.sale_price À partir de £24.95£39.95
Plus de The Frame
25 Inspiring Bedroom Wall Art Quotes to Wake Up...
25 Inspiring Bedroom Wall Art Quotes to Wake Up Happy Your bedroom walls are the first thing you see every morning and the last thing you see at night. That's...
How to Choose Perfect William Morris Framed Art...
How to Select William Morris Framed Prints That Transform Your Space William Morris prints have a way of making any room feel instantly more interesting. Those intricate florals and intertwining...
Top 20 William Morris Art Prints for Modern Homes
Top 20 William Morris Art Prints for Modern Homes: Styling Guide and Sources William Morris designed his first wallpaper pattern in 1862, and somehow those intricate botanicals still look completely...









