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Close-up of vibrant red strawberries in the 5-panel ‘Berry Good Vibrations: Framed Strawberry Photography Wall Art’ mounted on a living room wall
Room view showcasing ‘Berry Good Vibrations: Framed Strawberry Photography Wall Art’ with natural wooden frames above a sofa
Close-up of vibrant red strawberries in the 5-panel ‘Berry Good Vibrations: Framed Strawberry Photography Wall Art’ mounted on a living room wall
Room view showcasing ‘Berry Good Vibrations: Framed Strawberry Photography Wall Art’ with natural wooden frames above a sofa

Berry Good Vibrations: Framed Strawberry Photography Wall Art

Get your walls in on the berry fun! This 5-panel framed photography Wall Art features vibrant strawberries, splash-proof finish and easy hooks—instant summer vibes for any room.

₹ 2,496


Brand : INEP

Description

Say hello to summer all year round with this playful 5-panel framed photography Wall Art starring juicy strawberries. Built with splash-proof laminate on sturdy wooden MDF, it’s ready to hang and bring cheerful vibes!

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

Three weekends of browsing. Probably fifteen saved items. Maybe eight open tabs still sitting there. And you're still here because every time you get close to buying wall art, the same question stops you: will this actually look proportional above my sofa, or will I regret this the moment it goes up? You're not indecisive—you're careful. Because once this is on your living room wall, you'll see it daily. It needs to be right.

This 127cm five-panel strawberry canvas wall art painting might be the piece that finally ends your search. Not because it's louder than everything else you've seen—but because it answers the proportion question your eye keeps asking. At 127 centimeters wide, it spans roughly 35% of a standard 12-foot Indian living room wall. That's wide enough to anchor your sofa arrangement without swallowing the wall entirely. And the subject—fresh, market-basket strawberries in rich reds against soft natural tones—brings warmth without demanding attention the way abstract or dramatic art does.

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

Your living room wall is probably around 12 feet wide—that's roughly 360 centimeters. This canvas spans 127 centimeters of that space. Quick math: 127 ÷ 360 = 35% coverage. That leaves approximately 116 centimeters of breathing room on each side if you center it.

Why does this matter? Because wall art that's too small—say, 90cm on a 12-foot wall—covers only 25% and looks like an afterthought, floating awkwardly. Go too large at 150cm+, and you're at 42% coverage, which can feel overwhelming in rooms under 14x14 feet.

At 127cm, you're in what designers call the "intentional zone"—large enough to be the clear focal point, small enough to let your wall breathe. If your sofa is the typical 6-8 feet wide, this canvas will span roughly 55-70% of the sofa's width. That's textbook proportion: art should be approximately two-thirds the width of the furniture beneath it.

The height—76 centimeters—works with standard 9-10 foot ceilings. Hung with its center at eye level (roughly 150cm from floor), the top edge sits about 188cm up, leaving comfortable clearance below your ceiling and above your sofa backrest.

Why Strawberry Reds and Natural Tones Work in Indian Living Rooms

Your walls are probably cream, off-white, or that common builder's light yellow. These aren't exciting colors—but they're the perfect backdrop for what this canvas does with red.

The strawberry reds in this piece aren't the aggressive, almost-orange reds you see in cheaper prints. They're deep, saturated berry tones—closer to what you'd see in a Sunday market than a candy advertisement. Against cream walls, these reds create what color theory calls "warm contrast"—they pop forward visually without clashing.

The supporting palette matters too. The natural wooden baskets in the image echo the tones of typical Indian wooden furniture—your coffee table, your TV unit, your door frames. The soft teal-blue background adds just enough cool contrast to keep the composition from feeling too warm or heavy.

Under morning daylight, the reds will appear brightest and most vibrant. In evening LED light (most Indian homes use 4000K-6500K white LEDs), expect slightly deeper, richer tones. The piece won't look dramatically different—but it will feel warmer at night.

Rental-Friendly Mounting: Hanging Without Losing Your Deposit

If you're renting—and many urban Indian homes involve ₹50,000+ security deposits—you're probably worried about drilling. Here's what actually happens with this canvas.

The 5-panel set weighs 3 kilograms total. That's roughly 600 grams per panel—light enough that each panel can hang from a single nail or wall hook. You don't need heavy-duty anchors or multiple drill points. A standard picture hook rated for 1kg handles each panel easily.

Installation takes about 15-20 minutes. The key is getting the spacing right between panels—typically 2-3 centimeters creates the continuous-image effect while allowing individual panel adjustment. Most renters use small finishing nails or adhesive picture hooks. The holes left behind are tiny—easily filled with white toothpaste or wall putty before move-out inspection.

The 0.6cm depth means panels sit nearly flush against the wall. No dramatic shadows, no dust-collecting gaps. Just clean, gallery-style presentation.

How This Compares to Smaller and Larger Sizes You've Been Considering

You've probably looked at smaller options—maybe 90cm or 100cm pieces that feel safer. Here's the honest trade-off:

A 90cm canvas on your 12-foot wall covers 25% of the space. It works above a single armchair or in a bedroom. Above an 8-foot sofa? It will look undersized. Guests won't think "nice art"—they'll subconsciously feel something's off about the proportion.

A 150cm canvas covers 42%. Bold choice. Works beautifully if your room is 15x15 feet or larger with minimal other wall decor. In a standard 12x14 foot living room, it can dominate and make the space feel smaller.

At 127cm, you're choosing the middle path—which in wall art terms is usually the right path. Large enough to anchor the room, restrained enough to let your space breathe. This is the size interior designers typically recommend for Indian living rooms with standard proportions.

Setting Realistic Expectations: What You'll Actually See

Let's be honest about a few things.

The strawberries will look vibrant but not hyperreal. This is photography printed on 340 GSM cotton canvas with eco-solvent inks—you'll see subtle canvas texture up close, which actually adds warmth and an artistic quality. From normal viewing distance (2-3 meters, where your sofa sits), the texture disappears and you see the image.

Color accuracy: the reds will be true to what you see on screen if your monitor is reasonably calibrated. The wooden basket tones may appear slightly warmer in person—canvas tends to add warmth compared to backlit screens.

The five-panel split creates visual rhythm, but it also means the image has four vertical gaps. From 3+ meters, your eye blends them into a continuous scene. Closer, you notice the separation—which is intentional, giving the piece a gallery-wall feel rather than a single-poster look.

This canvas won't make your room look like a magazine spread overnight. What it will do is give you a focal point that feels proportional, warm, and intentionally chosen—not a desperate attempt to fill empty wall space.

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