An empty wall is an opportunity. Canvas art is one of the fastest ways to give a room identity — colour, scale and a focal point, without committing to a full redecoration. Here's how to choose and place it well, room by room.
Living Room
The living room usually has the largest, most visible wall in the home — typically above the sofa or the fireplace. As a rule of thumb, your canvas (or grouping of canvases) should span roughly two-thirds of the width of the furniture beneath it. A single large-format piece, such as our rolled canvas prints in 60x90cm or 70x100cm, reads as a genuine art statement rather than an afterthought.
Bedroom
Above the headboard is forgiving territory: symmetry works well here, whether that's one centred piece or a pair flanking a central point. Softer palettes and floral or botanical themes tend to suit rest spaces, though a bolder piece — a samurai canvas, for instance — can work beautifully as a single statement wall opposite the bed.
Hallway & Entryway
Narrow spaces are ideal for a vertical run of smaller or medium canvases — 35x50cm or 40x60cm sit comfortably in tighter corridors without overwhelming the space. This is also where abstract or graphic pieces earn their keep: something the eye catches in passing, rather than a work meant for long contemplation.
Home Office
Behind your desk or within the video-call frame, a single confident piece does more for a room than several small ones. Mythological and warrior themes — our mythology collection among them — tend to read as purposeful rather than decorative, which suits a working space.
A Note on Framing
All of our canvas prints are delivered rolled, unframed and without stretcher bars. This is deliberate: it keeps shipping safe and lets you choose the final presentation — stretched on a frame, floating-mounted, or clipped simply with a wooden dowel — to match the room it's going into.
Explore the full canvas collection to find the piece that fits your space.