IMG-LOGO

Cart

Five-panel Berry-blast Wall Art That'll Make Your Walls Jealous - Multi-Frame Photography Framed Art (127x76cm) hung above a sofa
Close-up of vibrant red berries in the Berry-blast Wall Art multi-frame photography set
Five-panel Berry-blast Wall Art That'll Make Your Walls Jealous - Multi-Frame Photography Framed Art (127x76cm) hung above a sofa
Close-up of vibrant red berries in the Berry-blast Wall Art multi-frame photography set

Berry-blast Wall Art That'll Make Your Walls Jealous - Multi-Frame Photography Framed Art (127x76cm)

Berry lovin’ alert! This multi-frame Wall Art splashes juicy berry photography across your walls in splash-proof, framed MDF frames—hooks included for instant style triumph!

₹ 2,496


Brand : INEP

Description

Turn your living room into a berry wonderland with this playful multi-frame Wall Art. Heat-treated MDF frames, matte lamination, and water-resistant finish keep those berries popping—and cleanup easy-peasy!

Key Attributes




Make it Extra Special


Customer reviews

Please login or register to submit your review. Please also note that submiting review is only enable for users who have bought this product


Qty:

Qty:

Moolwan 5-Panel Berry Canvas Wall Art Painting (127x76cm) - Macro Nature Photography Multi-Frame Art

You keep opening this page, trying to mentally place these berries on your living room wall. But it's impossible to know for sure, isn't it? 127cm looks perfect in mockups, but your wall has that window on one side, the TV unit below, maybe a bookshelf nearby. You need to know this works in your specific space—not just in styled photos where everything is conveniently minimal.

Here's what actually happens when you hang this 5-panel berry canvas on a typical 12-foot Indian living room wall: the 127cm width covers roughly 35% of the wall space. That leaves about 116cm of breathing room on each side—enough that the art commands attention without crowding other elements. If your wall is 10 feet, you're looking at closer to 42% coverage. Still balanced, just bolder.

The Visual Math: How 127cm Fits 12ft Walls in Indian Homes

Your living room wall is probably somewhere between 10 and 14 feet wide. Most Indian apartments fall in that range. Let's work through what 127cm actually means in your space.

On a 12-foot (360cm) wall, this canvas covers 35.2% of the horizontal space. Hang it centered above an 8-foot sofa, and you'll have roughly 45cm of wall visible on each side between the sofa arm and the canvas edge. That's the visual breathing room that makes wall art look intentional rather than cramped.

If you went smaller—say, a 100cm piece—you'd drop to 28% coverage. Not bad, but on larger walls it can start looking like an afterthought. Go larger to 150cm, and you're at 42% coverage, which works but starts feeling heavy if your room is on the smaller side (under 12x12 feet).

The 76cm height matters too. Standard Indian ceilings run 9-10 feet. Hang the center of this canvas at eye level (approximately 150cm from floor), and you'll have comfortable clearance both from the ceiling and from furniture below.

What These Colors Will Actually Look Like (Morning vs. Evening Light)

The product image shows deep purple-black berries against an olive-to-golden green bokeh background. But online images are backlit by your phone or monitor. On your cream or off-white wall, under actual room lighting, here's what shifts:

Morning natural light brings out the green undertones. The background gradient looks fresher, more alive. The berries appear almost navy rather than pure black.

Evening LED lighting (the warm white most Indian homes use) deepens the purple in the berries and warms the green background toward olive-gold. The overall effect becomes moodier, more dramatic.

The shallow depth of field in the photography means three of the five panels are predominantly soft green-gold blur. This is deliberate—it gives the eye a rest and prevents the artwork from feeling visually heavy. If your walls are the typical cream or light yellow, these greens will contrast gently rather than clash.

Rental-Friendly Mounting: How to Hang Without Losing Your Deposit

Five panels. That sounds like five sets of holes in your wall. But here's the practical reality: each panel is lightweight (the entire set weighs 3 kg distributed across five frames), and the 0.6cm depth means standard picture hooks work fine.

Use two small nails per panel for stability—that's ten small holes total, smaller than pencil tips. Fill them with white toothpaste or wall putty when you move out. Your ₹50,000 deposit stays safe.

Installation takes about 20-25 minutes if you're methodical. The key is getting the spacing between panels consistent—typically 2-3cm gaps work best for this size. Measure once, mark with painter's tape, then hang. The 1.5-inch pinewood frames are kiln-dried to 12% moisture content, so they won't warp in humid monsoon months.

How This Compares to Single-Panel Canvas You've Been Considering

You've probably looked at single-panel canvas prints around the same width. Here's the honest difference:

A single 127cm canvas gives you one unbroken image. It's simpler to hang (one piece) and creates a more traditional look. But it also looks heavier—one large rectangle can feel like a weight on the wall.

This 5-panel design breaks the same image across multiple frames with deliberate gaps. The visual effect is more contemporary, more gallery-like. The gaps create rhythm. Your eye moves across the panels rather than taking in one static block.

The trade-off: five panels require more precise alignment. If you're not comfortable with measuring and leveling, a single panel is more forgiving. But if you want that segmented, modern aesthetic, the multi-panel approach transforms the same image into something more dynamic.

Price-wise, this sits in Moolwan's standard range (₹2,796-₹4,596 for premium canvas). Marketplace alternatives at ₹800-1,200 typically use thinner canvas (200-250 GSM vs. Moolwan's 340 GSM), MDF instead of pinewood frames, and solvent inks that fade faster in Indian sunlight and humidity.

Setting Realistic Expectations: Colors, Lighting, and Your Space

This is macro photography of wild berries—the kind of image that rewards closer viewing. From across a 14-foot room, you'll see the color blocks and general composition. Move to 6-8 feet away (normal sofa-to-wall viewing distance), and the individual berries become distinct, the texture visible.

The colors are nature-derived: muted purples, organic greens. This isn't a vibrant abstract that pops from across the room. It's meant to add a natural, calming element—something that complements rather than dominates.

If your living room already has a lot of visual activity (patterned curtains, textured rugs, busy cushion covers), this subdued palette works as a counterbalance. If your room is minimal and neutral, the berry cluster becomes a subtle focal point without overwhelming.

The 340 GSM cotton canvas has a slight texture that catches light differently than flat prints. Under direct sunlight, you might notice this texture. Under diffused light or LEDs, it's less visible but adds depth to the colors.

Quick Specifications

Item added to cart

Quick View