IMG-LOGO

Cart

inep-b07v9sykhg-bloom-tastic-colour-splash-abstract-unframed-wall-art-hanging-on-a-modern-living-room-wall-showcasing-vibrant-floral-patterns.jpg
inep-b07v9sykhg-close-up-of-bloom-tastic-colour-splash-abstract-unframed-wall-art-on-premium-cotton-canvas-with-matte-finish-earthy-hues.jpg
inep-b07v9sykhg-bloom-tastic-colour-splash-abstract-unframed-wall-art-hanging-on-a-modern-living-room-wall-showcasing-vibrant-floral-patterns.jpg
inep-b07v9sykhg-close-up-of-bloom-tastic-colour-splash-abstract-unframed-wall-art-on-premium-cotton-canvas-with-matte-finish-earthy-hues.jpg

Bloom-tastic Colour Splash Abstract framed Wall Art That'll Jazz Up Your Walls (91x45.5cm)

Get ready to bloom—this 91x45.5cm framed Abstract Wall Art splashes your space with colour and fun, delivered rolled and ready to hang!

₹ 2,296


Brand : INEP

Description

Looking to bright up your walls? This 91x45.5cm framed Abstract Wall Art on premium cotton canvas bursts with vivid floral vibes. Delivered rolled for perfect condition, it’s your ticket to colour paradise!

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 Floral Bouquet Canvas Wall Art Painting (91x45.5cm) – Painterly Brushstroke Texture with Soft Gradient Backdrop

You keep opening the product page, trying to mentally place this on your wall. But it's impossible to know for sure, isn't it? 91cm wide looks perfect in mockups, but your hallway has that electrical switchboard on one side and a shoe cabinet below. Your bedroom wall has the AC unit positioned just off-center. You need to know this works in your specific space—not just styled photos with perfectly empty walls and strategic lighting.

Here's what the image doesn't tell you but the math will: at 91cm wide, this floral canvas covers roughly 25% of a standard 12-foot Indian wall. That leaves about 182cm on either side—enough breathing room that it won't feel cramped even with your existing wall fixtures. The 45.5cm height keeps it visually anchored without competing with ceiling fans or AC vents that typically sit 30-40cm below 9-foot ceilings.

The painterly brushstroke texture is what separates this from flat digital prints. Look closely at the pink rose—the strokes are visible, layered, mimicking how actual oil paint builds depth. The soft blue-green-yellow gradient behind the bouquet isn't a solid color; it transitions the way natural light does through a window. This texture catches different light throughout the day rather than looking identical morning to night.

Why 91cm Works on 8-10 Foot Walls (And What Changes If You Size Up or Down)

Your wall is probably 10-12 feet wide if you're in a standard 2BHK or 3BHK living room. If it's a hallway, likely 8-9 feet between door frames. Here's the spatial math:

On a 10-foot (300cm) wall, 91cm covers 30%—the visual sweet spot where art feels intentional without dominating. You'd have roughly 104cm of wall space on each side. If you have a console table (typically 80-100cm wide), the canvas extends just slightly beyond its edges, creating that professional "art gallery" proportion designers aim for.

On an 8-foot (240cm) wall, coverage jumps to 38%. Still balanced, but now the canvas becomes more of a statement piece. Less wall visible means your eye goes directly to the blooms rather than wandering to empty space around it.

The 45.5cm height matters for vertical placement. Above a 75cm-tall console table, hung 20cm above it, the canvas top edge sits at around 140cm from the floor. Eye level for most adults is 150-160cm, which means the visual center of the bouquet—that vivid pink rose—lands exactly where your eye naturally rests when entering the room.

If you went smaller (say, 60cm wide), you'd lose 35% of the visual presence. On that same 10-foot wall, it would look tentative rather than confident—like you weren't sure if you wanted art there or not. Go larger (120cm), and in a hallway, you'd start competing with doorway frames and light switches.

What These Colors Look Like on Cream Walls (Morning vs LED)

The pink rose isn't one shade—it transitions from deep magenta at the outer petals to soft blush at the center. Against cream walls (Asian Paints 0335 or similar), this pink reads warm and inviting, not jarring. The orange accent flowers pick up golden undertones that complement the warm cream.

In morning light (east-facing rooms, 7-10 AM), the soft blue-green background appears cooler, more prominent. The gradient feels fresh, like the colors are breathing. The white daisies really pop during these hours—their brightness contrasts against the colored blooms.

In evening LED light (warm white 3000K, which most Indian homes have), the entire piece shifts warmer. That blue-green background becomes more teal-ish, the pink rose intensifies to almost coral in certain angles. The purple/lavender lilacs at the top deepen rather than wash out—a sign of properly saturated inks rather than cheap digital printing.

Against off-white or builder's peach walls, the orange flowers become the visual anchor rather than the pink rose. This isn't wrong—it's just a different reading. If you want the pink to remain dominant, a true cream or white wall is ideal. If you're in a newer apartment with that specific peachy-cream builders use, the canvas will read more autumnal than springlike.

The green leaves tie everything to wooden furniture—your brown sofa, teak coffee table, sheesham dining chairs. Nature tones calling to nature materials. It's why floral art works in Indian homes where wood dominates in ways that stark geometric abstracts often don't.

Installation in Indian Walls (Concrete vs Drywall)

At 400 grams, this is genuinely lightweight—about the weight of a hardcover book. This changes your installation reality significantly.

For concrete walls (most older apartments, any building pre-2010): A single 6mm anchor and screw will hold this securely. You don't need the heavy-duty two-point hanging system that larger canvases require. One centered hook works. Drill time: 30 seconds with a hammer drill.

For drywall (newer construction, partition walls in offices): A single drywall anchor rated for 2-3kg will be more than sufficient. You could honestly use a heavy-duty adhesive hook (Command strips rated for 1kg+) and be fine, though anchors are more secure long-term.

The D-ring hanger system on the back allows micro-adjustments after hanging. If you realize the canvas sits 1cm too far left once it's up, you can shift it on the wire without re-drilling. This matters in hallways where you're trying to center between a door frame and a light switch.

For renters specifically: the single small hole required for this weight means touch-up at move-out takes 60 seconds. Fill with matching wall putty, let dry, done. You're looking at a ₹50 repair kit covering dozens of such holes. This isn't the heavy art that requires three expansion bolts and leaves craters in your landlord's wall.

How This Compares to Macrame Wall Hangings You've Been Considering

Macrame is having a moment—Instagram, Pinterest, every home decor account features those woven wall hangings. But here's the practical reality for Indian homes:

Dust accumulation: Macrame's textured fibers trap dust within weeks. In cities with construction nearby, pollution, or just normal Indian dust levels, you're looking at monthly cleaning minimum—and you can't just wipe macrame. It requires careful vacuuming or outdoor shaking. Canvas? Dry microfiber cloth, 30 seconds, done.

Humidity response: Cotton macrame absorbs moisture during monsoons. It sags. The knots loosen slightly. The entire piece stretches vertically over 2-3 monsoon seasons. If you're in Mumbai, Chennai, or Kolkata, you'll notice the difference by year two. Canvas with moisture-resistant coating maintains tension regardless of humidity.

Color longevity: Macrame comes in limited colors—natural beige, occasional dyed versions that fade quickly. This floral canvas gives you pink, orange, white, purple, green, and that entire gradient backdrop. The UV-resistant inks mean these colors stay consistent; macrame dyes shift toward muddy tones within a year of indirect sunlight.

Visual weight: Macrame diffuses—your eye moves through the negative spaces between threads. Canvas commands—your eye lands on the pink rose and then explores outward. For a statement piece in a hallway or above a console, canvas creates the focal point macrame by design cannot.

Price comparison: Decent macrame (not the cheap ₹500 versions that fall apart) runs ₹1,500-2,500 for this size equivalent. For similar or slightly higher investment, you get a finished, color-rich, maintenance-free piece that doesn't require ongoing care.

What This Will Actually Feel Like in Your Room

From the doorway of a 12x14 foot living room, the pink rose is visible as the focal point even from 4 meters away. The brushstroke texture won't be apparent at that distance—it reads as smooth—but the color blocking (pink against green against gradient) is clear and intentional.

At 2 meters (typical sofa-to-wall distance), the individual flowers become distinct. You can see the white daisies are daisies, the orange blooms are their own cluster, the lilacs have that characteristic purple cascade. This is the "appreciation distance" where the composition makes sense as a whole.

At 1 meter (walking past in a hallway, or standing directly in front), the painterly texture becomes the story. The visible brushstrokes, the layering of paint-effect in the digital print, the subtle gradient transitions. This is where quality difference shows—cheap prints look pixelated at this distance, quality prints reveal depth.

Solo or with adjacent decor: This piece works alone on a wall—the multiple blooms create enough visual interest without needing companion pieces. If you're building a gallery wall, it functions as the anchor piece with smaller framed items around it, but the color palette is busy enough that monochrome companions (simple line art, text prints in black frames) work better than additional colorful pieces competing with these blooms.


Moolwan Design Note

The gradient backdrop—shifting from soft blue at top through green-yellow toward the stems—mimics how natural light diffuses through petals. This isn't a flat colored background with flowers placed on top; it's painted as if the light source exists within the scene itself.

Moolwan Quality Standard

Designed for Indian apartments and lighting conditions. Packed for long-distance Indian transit. Quality checked before dispatch. Printed to resist humidity-related color fading. Ships from West Bengal.

Moolwan Fit Guidance for Indian Homes

91cm width suits 8-10 foot walls in hallways, bedrooms, or above console tables. The 45.5cm height works below 9-foot ceilings without competing with AC units or ceiling fixtures. Vertical floral composition draws the eye upward, making standard-height rooms feel slightly taller.


Quick Specifications


Frequently Asked Questions

Will 91cm wide canvas look proportional above my 4-foot console table? Yes. A 4-foot (120cm) console table pairs well with 91cm canvas—the art extends to about 75% of the table width, which is the ideal proportion. The canvas won't overhang the table edges, and you'll have roughly 15cm of table visible on each side, creating a balanced visual frame.

How do the pink and orange tones look against warm beige walls? The pink rose shifts slightly coral against warm beige—still distinct but less "pop" than against pure white or cool cream. The orange accents harmonize beautifully with beige since both share warm undertones. The green leaves prevent the warm tones from becoming overwhelming by providing cool contrast.

Can I hang this with adhesive strips instead of drilling? At 400 grams, yes—heavy-duty adhesive strips rated for 1kg will hold this canvas securely on smooth, painted walls. Avoid adhesive mounting on textured walls (those with that grainy builder's finish) as the strips won't adhere properly. For textured surfaces, a single small anchor remains the reliable choice.

Will the colors fade if my hallway gets afternoon sun through a window? The eco-solvent UV-resistant inks are tested for direct sunlight exposure without color shift. For hallways with 3-4 hours of afternoon sun, expect consistent colors for 3+ years. The soft gradient background might show fading first in extreme cases, but the flower colors—particularly the pink rose and orange blooms—are the most stable elements.

Is this suitable as a housewarming gift? Floral art is among the safest gift choices—it doesn't carry religious or cultural specificity (unlike deity art), and the nature theme appeals across age groups and interior styles. The 91cm size is substantial enough to feel like a considered gift rather than a small token, without being so large that it dictates where the recipient must place it.


Product Snapshot

Item added to cart

Quick View