You've walked past that blank wall above your sofa at least twice a day for months now. You've saved options. You've compared. You've closed tabs. And every time you get close to deciding, something stops you — what if it's too bold? What if the colors fight with your furniture? What if it looks nothing like the photo once it's actually up there?
This 5-panel rose art solves that specific paralysis. The deep magenta bloom against jet black creates presence without aggression. It won't compete with your cream walls or brown sofa — it'll anchor them. The green leaf detail on the left panel keeps it from feeling too stark, grounding the composition in something organic and familiar. And at 127cm wide, it's sized to fill the visual weight above a 7-8 foot sofa without overwhelming the room.
At 127cm width, this piece covers roughly 35-40% of a standard 10-12 foot Indian living room wall — the range where art feels intentional, not cramped or overwhelming. Above an 8-foot sofa (240cm), you get comfortable breathing room on either side: approximately 55-60cm of wall visible on each end, which reads as balanced symmetry rather than "just barely fit."
The 76cm height works specifically for standard 8-10 foot Indian ceilings. Mount it 20-25cm above your sofa top, and you'll have roughly 100-120cm of wall space above the art before hitting the ceiling line. From your doorway — where guests first see the room — the rose composition sits at natural eye-travel height, drawing attention without requiring anyone to look up awkwardly.
The 5-panel format spans this width as a continuous image split across distinct frames. Panel gaps of 2-3cm between each section create visual rhythm and add dimensional interest that a single flat canvas can't achieve. The center panel carries the rose bloom's core, while outer panels extend the water-droplet background, giving the piece breathing room within itself.
The magenta here isn't the soft pink you'd find in botanical prints — it's saturated, almost electric, with purple undertones that deepen toward the petal folds. Against cream or off-white walls (what 70% of Indian apartments have), this creates clean contrast without the harshness of pure black-and-white photography.
In morning daylight, the black background reads as rich charcoal with visible water droplet texture. The rose petals catch light and appear almost luminescent. The green leaves on the left panel provide a visual anchor that connects the dramatic bloom to something earthy and familiar.
Under warm LED lighting (3000K, standard in Indian homes), the magenta shifts slightly warmer — more raspberry than fuchsia. The black deepens to true black, and the water droplets become subtle highlights rather than bright spots. This evening appearance is when the piece looks most dramatic, and it's when most guests will see it.
Against colored walls — light yellow, peach, sage green — this works because the dominant black background absorbs and neutralizes rather than competing. The magenta doesn't clash with warm wall tones; it punctuates them.
Five panels means five hanging points. This sounds complicated until you realize: the included paper template marks all five positions at once. You tape the template at your chosen height, mark through the pre-punched holes, remove the template, and drill. Total measuring required: one horizontal level check across the template. That's it.
For concrete walls (most older Indian buildings), use the included masonry anchors with a 6mm bit. Drill 35mm deep, tap in anchors, screw in hooks. For drywall (modern apartments, especially post-2010 construction), use the plastic wall anchors with a 6mm bit, 30mm depth.
At 3kg total weight distributed across five panels, each individual panel weighs around 600 grams — light enough that even basic wall anchors hold comfortably. The real installation consideration is leveling: use a spirit level across the template before marking, and all five panels will align automatically.
Rental-friendly reality: five 6mm holes are actually less visually disruptive than the single large hole you'd need for a heavy mirror or mounted TV bracket. When you move out, five small putty fills and paint touch-ups take 15 minutes and cost under ₹100 in materials.
Fabric tapestries look appealing in photos — soft, textural, bohemian. In practice, in Indian conditions, they're maintenance headaches. Fabric absorbs dust. Fabric absorbs cooking odors if your living room opens to the kitchen. Fabric absorbs humidity during monsoons, developing that slightly musty smell that never fully leaves. Fabric wrinkles, requiring periodic re-stretching or ironing (yes, people iron tapestries). And fabric fades — the dyes used in textile printing aren't UV-stable the way vinyl inks are.
This splash-proof vinyl print on MDF solves all of those problems. The vinyl surface wipes clean with a dry cloth. It doesn't absorb moisture or odors. It won't wrinkle or sag. The colors remain stable through direct sunlight exposure — that deep magenta will still be deep magenta two monsoon seasons from now. The MDF backing provides rigidity that fabric can't match: each panel sits flat against the wall, creating clean shadow lines and uniform depth.
The visual difference: fabric tapestries always look slightly soft, slightly informal, like a poster you're dressing up. Vinyl on MDF looks like something you chose deliberately — clean edges, saturated colors, professional mounting.
From the doorway, your eye will go to the rose first — the magenta against black creates enough contrast to pull focus from 15-20 feet away. This is statement art, not background art. If you want something that blends quietly into the room, this isn't it. If you want something that makes the room feel anchored and intentional, this is exactly it.
Up close (standing at the sofa), the water droplet detail becomes visible. The 5-panel split creates subtle depth — each panel edge casts a hairline shadow that adds dimensionality you don't get from flat single-piece art. The green leaves on the left panel prevent the composition from feeling too isolated; they suggest a continuation beyond the frame.
Solo placement works best for this piece. It's already a 5-panel composition — adding adjacent frames or gallery arrangements around it creates visual competition. Let it anchor the wall alone, with perhaps a floor lamp or side table below to balance the visual weight.
Moolwan Design Note The water droplets aren't decorative afterthought — they create micro-highlights that catch light differently throughout the day, giving this piece subtle visual movement that static botanical prints lack.
Moolwan Quality Standard Designed for Indian apartments and lighting conditions. Splash-proof vinyl resists humidity-related warping. Printed to maintain color saturation through monsoon seasons. Quality checked before dispatch. Packed for long-distance Indian transit. Ships from West Bengal.
Moolwan Fit Guidance for Indian Homes At 127cm width, sized specifically for above 7-8 foot sofas on 10-12 foot walls. The 76cm height works with standard 8-10 foot Indian ceilings without crowding the space above.
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product | Moolwan 5-Panel Rose Vinyl Wall Art on MDF (127x76cm) |
| Brand | Moolwan |
| Category | Vinyl Wall Art on MDF |
| Collection | Nature Wall Art Collection |
| Dimensions | 127cm W x 76cm H |
| Weight | 3 kg |
| Material & Construction | Splash-proof vinyl print on MDF panels |
| Colors | Deep magenta rose, jet black background, forest green leaves, silver-white water droplets |
| Panel Count | 5 panels |
| Best For | Living room above 7-8ft sofa, 10-12ft walls, cream/neutral wall colors |
| Ships From | West Bengal |
Will 127cm be too wide for my wall if my sofa is only 6 feet? At 127cm (approximately 4.2 feet), this piece would extend slightly beyond a 6-foot sofa's visual footprint on each side. It can still work if your wall is 10+ feet wide and you have side tables or floor lamps flanking the sofa — those extend the furniture's visual weight to match the art. If your setup is minimal (just sofa, nothing beside it), consider whether the extended coverage feels balanced when you measure with tape on the wall first.
How will the magenta look against my light yellow walls? The black background acts as a buffer between the magenta and your wall color. Rather than magenta sitting directly against yellow (which could clash), you get magenta sitting in a black field that then meets your yellow wall. The contrast is clean rather than competing. The green leaf accent on the left panel also helps bridge to warmer wall tones.
How do I ensure all five panels are level during installation? The included hanging template solves this — it's a single paper sheet with all five mounting points pre-marked at correct spacing. Tape the template level using a spirit level, mark through the holes, remove the template, and drill. All panels will align automatically because they're all marked from one level reference.
Will the colors fade if my wall gets afternoon sun? The vinyl printing uses UV-stable inks designed for outdoor signage applications. Direct afternoon sun won't cause noticeable fading over typical ownership periods. The black background is particularly stable — it won't shift to gray or brown tones even with sustained sun exposure.
How do I clean dust off the panels? Dry microfiber cloth, wiped gently across the vinyl surface. The splash-proof coating means dust sits on the surface rather than embedding in texture — it wipes away cleanly without water or cleaning products. Don't use furniture polish or wet cloths; dry dusting every 2-3 weeks is all this needs.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Brand | Moolwan |
| Product | Moolwan 5-Panel Rose Vinyl Wall Art on MDF (127x76cm) |
| Category | Vinyl Wall Art on MDF |
| Collection | Nature Wall Art Collection |
| Theme/Type | Floral / Rose Close-Up |
| Best For | Living room above 7-8ft sofa, 10-12ft walls, neutral/cream wall colors |
| Primary Differentiator | High-contrast magenta-on-black drama that commands attention without clashing with neutral walls |
| Secondary Differentiators | Water droplet detail creates dimensional depth; Green leaf accent grounds the composition naturally |
| Material & Construction | Splash-proof vinyl print on MDF panels |
| Care Instructions | Dry dust with microfiber cloth every 2-3 weeks; avoid water or cleaning chemicals |
| Ships From | West Bengal |
| Packing | Long-distance transit ready |
| Quality Check | Before dispatch |