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Image of Berry-licious Photography Framed Wall Art: Strawberry Multi-Frame Spectacle highlighting juicy strawberry panels in modern decor
Image of Berry-licious Photography Framed Wall Art: Strawberry Multi-Frame Spectacle close-up showing vibrant red and green prints
Image of Berry-licious Photography Framed Wall Art: Strawberry Multi-Frame Spectacle highlighting juicy strawberry panels in modern decor
Image of Berry-licious Photography Framed Wall Art: Strawberry Multi-Frame Spectacle close-up showing vibrant red and green prints

Berry Bliss Multi-Panel Framed Photography Wall Art That'll Strawberry-ize Your Space

Get ready to berry-up your walls with this multi-frame photography framed wall art! Juicy strawberry panels, splashproof finish, and sturdy wooden MDF frames make it the sweetest decor upgrade ever.

₹ 2,496


Brand : INEP

Description

Dive into a berry paradise with this multi-panel framed photography wall art! Crisp strawberry imagery printed on splashproof wooden MDF, heat-treated and laminated for vibrant, long-lasting vibes. Hook-and-hang fun guaranteed!

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Moolwan 5-Panel Strawberry Canvas Wall Art Painting (127×76cm) - Multi-Frame Food Photography Art

You've measured your living room wall three times. Maybe four. The tape measure says 360 cm, but you're still not confident because that empty space above the sofa looks different every time you stand back. Every guide says something different, and none account for the fact that your wall has a window on one side and a shelf on the other. You keep second-guessing: is 127 cm actually right for a 12-foot wall?

Here's the math that settles it. A 127 cm canvas on a 360 cm (12 ft) wall covers roughly 35% of the horizontal space. That leaves about 116 cm on each side—enough breathing room to feel balanced, not cramped. If your sofa is probably 6-8 feet wide (180-240 cm), this canvas extends slightly beyond the sofa's visual center, which creates intentional presence rather than that "floating picture frame" effect you get with smaller pieces.

The strawberry photography across five panels brings something unexpected to Indian living rooms—macro food art that feels neither generic nor overdone. Unlike the predictable landscape or abstract choices you've probably scrolled past, fresh strawberry imagery in vivid red and leafy green introduces organic energy without competing with your existing décor.

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

Let's break this down because the numbers actually matter. Your wall is probably around 360 cm (12 ft). This canvas stretches 127 cm across and stands 76 cm tall. That's 35% horizontal coverage—the range where art commands attention without overwhelming the space.

If you went smaller—say, 90 cm—you'd cover only 25% of the wall. The canvas would look like an afterthought, especially if your ceiling height is the standard 9-10 feet. If you went larger—say, 150 cm—you'd hit 42% coverage, which works on completely bare walls but feels crowded if you have side tables, floor lamps, or windows nearby.

The 5-panel split adds another dimension. Each panel is approximately 25 cm wide with small gaps between them. This creates visual movement—your eye travels across the strawberry cascade rather than landing on a single static frame. Above a 7-foot sofa, the 127 cm width extends about 30 cm beyond the sofa on each side. That's the sweet spot where art and furniture feel connected, not accidentally adjacent.

Why Vibrant Red and Green Work in Indian Living Rooms (Not Just Online Photos)

Your walls are probably cream, off-white, or that builder's peach that comes standard in most Indian flats. The vibrant red strawberries and fresh green stems create contrast without clashing. Red energizes neutral walls—it's why traditional Indian homes often feature red accents in cushions, pooja décor, or artwork.

The green tones ground the composition. Against cream walls, the leafy greens read as organic and fresh rather than overly saturated. If you have wooden furniture—teak coffee tables, sheesham shelving—the warm undertones in the strawberry reds complement the wood grain rather than competing with it.

In morning natural light, the reds appear brighter, almost coral-toned. Under evening LED lights (the warm white most Indian homes use), the reds deepen to a richer berry hue. Both versions work—the photography's color depth was designed for variable lighting, not studio-perfect conditions you'll never replicate at home.

Installation Takes 15 Minutes (Even If You're Not Handy)

The 5-panel design arrives with individual frames, each weighing roughly 600 grams. Total weight is 3 kg—light enough that standard wall hooks hold them securely. You won't need heavy-duty anchors or professional help.

For renters worried about deposits (and if you're protecting a ₹50,000+ security deposit, this matters): each panel needs just one nail or adhesive hook. The 0.6 cm depth means the frames sit nearly flush against the wall, so there's no dramatic shadow gap that screams "art installation" and attracts landlord scrutiny.

Spacing between panels should be approximately 2-3 cm. The gaps create that gallery-style separation that makes multi-panel art look intentional. Start with the center panel, mark your level line, then work outward. A phone level app works fine—no need for professional tools.

How This Compares to Smaller Sizes You've Been Considering

If you've been eyeing 90 cm options because they feel "safer," here's what you'd actually get: a canvas that covers 25% of your 12-foot wall. It works above a 5-foot console table, but above a standard Indian sofa (6-8 feet), it looks undersized. You'd spend ₹1,800-2,200 on something that feels like compromise.

The 127 cm version costs more, but the visual impact per rupee is significantly higher. You're not just getting more canvas—you're getting proportionally correct art that won't need replacing when you realize the smaller piece looks lost on your wall.

Compared to single-panel art at similar dimensions, the 5-panel split adds perceived value. Guests notice multi-panel installations differently—they read as curated choices rather than impulse purchases. Whether that social validation matters to you is personal, but the difference in perception is real.

Setting Realistic Expectations: Colors, Viewing Distance, and Your Space

From your sofa—probably 8-10 feet away from the wall—the strawberry details blend into a cohesive red-and-green composition. You won't see individual seeds or texture from that distance. Up close (2-3 feet, when walking past), the macro photography reveals its detail: the texture of strawberry skin, the tiny hairs on stems, the translucent quality of ripe fruit.

The splashproof finish means you can hang this in kitchen-adjacent dining areas without worrying about humidity or oil vapor. It's not waterproof, but it handles the 70-85% humidity of Indian monsoons without warping or color bleeding. In AC-cooled rooms, the temperature differential won't affect the canvas.

What this isn't: fine art canvas with heavy impasto texture. It's high-resolution photographic printing on coated canvas—crisp, vibrant, and modern. If you're expecting painterly brushstrokes, this isn't that. If you want photo-realistic food art that brings energy to neutral spaces, this delivers exactly that.

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