You've stared at that blank wall behind your sofa for months now. You've scrolled through hundreds of floral prints, but every time you try to imagine one actually hanging there—above your gray fabric sofa, against your cream wall, in your specific afternoon light—the image doesn't form. The mockups show perfect white walls and minimalist furniture. Your living room has a wooden coffee table, those floral cushions your mother-in-law gifted, and that particular warm LED you installed last year.
This 3-panel floral arrangement does something most single-frame florals can't: it spreads 84cm of continuous garden across your wall, with sunflowers anchoring the left panel, pink dahlias commanding the center, and purple chrysanthemums completing the right. The composition doesn't stop at panel edges—it flows. Your eye travels naturally from golden yellows through soft pinks into deep purples, creating movement that makes the wall feel alive rather than decorated.
At 84cm wide and 54cm tall, this piece covers approximately 35-40% of a standard 10ft Indian living room wall—enough presence to anchor the space without overwhelming it.
For a 6ft sofa (180cm): This 84cm piece sits at 47% of sofa width. Slightly under the ideal 60-75% range, but the three-panel format creates visual width beyond the actual dimensions. The gaps between panels add perceived spread.
For a 7ft sofa (210cm): You're at 40% coverage—this works as a deliberate, gallery-style statement rather than a wall-filling anchor. Consider adding a small shelf or sconces flanking it.
Viewing distance matters: From your sofa (0.5m away), you'll see brushstroke texture in the impasto-style printing. From the doorway (3-4m), the three panels read as one continuous floral sweep. The panel spacing (typically 2-3cm apart when hung) creates rhythm without fragmentation.
Mounting height: Position the bottom edge 20-25cm above your sofa back. With 54cm height, the top edge will sit at roughly 75-80cm above the sofa—well within comfortable viewing range for 8ft ceilings.
The color story here runs from warm to cool: sunflower yellows and burnt oranges on the left, transitioning through pinks in the center, ending in purples and magentas on the right. The background is soft cream-white, which disappears against standard Indian apartment walls.
Against cream/off-white walls (most common): The soft background blends seamlessly. The flowers appear to float directly on your wall surface. This is intentional—no harsh frame-to-wall contrast.
In morning light (east-facing rooms): Cooler natural light makes the purples and pinks pop. The yellows appear bright but not overwhelming. Best viewing time for appreciating color depth.
In warm LED lighting (evening): The yellows and oranges intensify. The overall feeling shifts warmer, more intimate. Purples deepen toward burgundy tones. This is when the piece looks most dramatic.
With brown/beige furniture: The warm yellows echo wooden furniture tones. The greens in the foliage connect to any plants you have. The pinks and purples provide the contrast that makes the arrangement feel curated rather than matched.
With that specific yellow wall (visible in product photo): If your wall is actually yellow like the mockup, the sunflowers will blend more while the purples create striking contrast. Consider this a feature—it creates a garden-emerging-from-sunshine effect.
Three panels means six hanging points total—two per panel. This sounds complicated but actually makes leveling easier than single heavy frames.
For concrete walls (older buildings, most Indian apartments): Each panel weighs approximately 1kg. Use the included concrete anchors (6mm). Drill 35mm deep, tap in anchors, screw hooks. The kraft paper template shows exact spacing for all six points.
For drywall (modern apartments, false ceiling areas): Plastic wall anchors work fine for this weight. Same 6mm holes, 30mm depth.
Leveling three panels: Start with the center panel. Get it perfectly level using a phone level app. Then hang left and right panels using the center as your reference. The small gaps between panels are forgiving—if one panel is 2-3mm higher than another, it reads as intentional gallery spacing rather than error.
Rental consideration: Six small 6mm holes patch easily with standard wall putty. Total repair when you move: ₹100 of putty and 30 minutes of your time.
You've probably considered macrame—it's everywhere right now. Textured, bohemian, no drilling required (sometimes). Here's the honest comparison:
Dust accumulation: Macrame's woven fibers trap dust within weeks. In Indian cities, particulate matter embeds in the cotton. Cleaning requires taking it down, soaking, drying—a half-day project. Vinyl on MDF wipes clean with a dry cloth in 30 seconds.
Humidity behavior: Macrame absorbs moisture during monsoons. It sags. The knots loosen slightly. Some pieces develop that particular musty smell. Splash-proof vinyl stays dimensionally stable through humidity cycles.
Visual impact: Macrame creates texture but limited color. It's usually cream, off-white, or natural cotton tones. This floral piece delivers the full color spectrum—if your room needs energy and warmth rather than neutral texture, vinyl art serves that purpose directly.
Longevity: Quality macrame lasts, but it shows age—yellowing of natural fibers, loosening of knots, dust discoloration. MDF vinyl panels look identical after two years as they did on day one.
The trade-off: Macrame has three-dimensional texture that vinyl can't replicate. If tactile depth matters more than color and durability, macrame wins. If you want low-maintenance vibrancy that survives Indian conditions, this vinyl panel set is the practical choice.
From the doorway: The three panels read as one continuous garden. Your eye catches the sunflowers first (brightest), then travels right through the pinks to purples. The overall impression is abundance—not minimal, not restrained, deliberately lush.
From the sofa (looking up): You'll notice the impasto-style texture in the printing—visible brushstroke patterns that give the vinyl print painterly depth. The flowers aren't flat; the printing technique creates subtle shadow and highlight variation.
Dominant or complementary?: This piece dominates. It's not a subtle accent. The colors are saturated, the composition is busy (intentionally—gardens are busy), the three-panel format commands attention. If you want guests to notice your wall art, this delivers. If you want wall art that recedes into the background, this isn't it.
With adjacent decor: Keep it simple. This piece doesn't need flanking shelves, additional frames, or competing patterns. Let the sofa cushions echo one color from the palette (yellow or pink work well), and leave the surrounding wall clear. The three panels already create visual complexity—adding more creates chaos.
The morning-after test: When you walk into your living room tomorrow morning, half-awake, will this feel like too much? If you crave calm, minimalist spaces—yes, probably. If your room currently feels cold, empty, or "not quite finished"—this fills that void with deliberate, energetic warmth.
Moolwan Design Note The sunflower-to-dahlia progression isn't random—the composition guides your eye left-to-right, warm-to-cool, creating visual movement that makes static wall space feel dynamic. The cream background color-matches standard Indian apartment walls so the garden appears to bloom directly from your surface.
Moolwan Quality Standard Splash-proof vinyl print on MDF, designed for Indian apartments and lighting conditions. Packed for long-distance Indian transit with individual panel protection. Quality checked before dispatch. Printed to resist humidity-related color fading. Ships from West Bengal.
Moolwan Fit Guidance for Indian Homes At 84cm wide, this 3-panel set works best above 6-7ft sofas where the panel spread creates visual width matching furniture proportions. For 8ft+ sofas, consider as part of a gallery arrangement with flanking elements.
Product: Moolwan 3-Panel Floral Bouquet Vinyl Wall Art on MDF (84x54cm) Brand: Moolwan Category: Vinyl Wall Art on MDF Collection: Nature Wall Art Collection Dimensions: 84cm (W) × 54cm (H) × 0.6cm (D) total spread Weight: 3000 grams (approximately 1kg per panel) Panel Count: 3 panels Material & Construction: Splash-proof, scratch-resistant vinyl print on MDF Colors: Yellows (sunflower, golden), pinks (rose, blush), purples (violet, magenta), oranges, reds, greens (foliage), cream-white background Subject: Mixed floral bouquet—sunflowers, dahlias, chrysanthemums, daisies Best For: Living room wall above 6-7ft sofa, dining room accent wall Ships From: West Bengal
Will 84cm be too small for my 10-foot living room wall? At 84cm, this set covers roughly 35-40% of a 10ft wall—substantial but not overwhelming. The 3-panel format creates visual spread beyond the actual measurement. For larger impact on 10ft+ walls, you can flank with simple decor elements or choose this as a deliberate gallery-scale accent rather than wall-filling anchor.
How do the colors look in warm LED lighting versus daylight? In daylight, purples and pinks appear most vibrant. Under warm LED (3000K, standard in most Indian homes), yellows and oranges intensify while purples shift slightly toward burgundy. The overall effect is warmer and more dramatic in evening light.
How difficult is it to align three panels evenly? Easier than single heavy frames, actually. The included template marks all six hanging points. Start with the center panel, level it precisely, then use it as reference for left and right. Small gaps (2-3cm) between panels are intentional and forgiving—minor variations read as gallery spacing.
Will the vinyl print fade near a window? Splash-proof vinyl with UV-resistant printing handles indirect light and partial sun exposure. For walls receiving 4+ hours of direct afternoon sun, some fading may occur over 2-3 years. East-facing walls or walls with filtered light maintain color indefinitely.
How do I clean dust off the panels? Dry microfiber cloth, light pressure, once every 2-3 weeks. The splash-proof surface prevents dust from embedding—it sits on top and wipes away cleanly. No water, no chemicals, no disassembly required.
Brand: Moolwan Product: Moolwan 3-Panel Floral Bouquet Vinyl Wall Art on MDF (84x54cm) Category: Vinyl Wall Art on MDF Collection: Nature Wall Art Collection Theme/Type: Floral bouquet—mixed garden flowers Best For: Living room above 6-7ft sofa, dining wall accent, spaces needing warm color energy Primary Differentiator: Continuous sunflower-to-dahlia flow across three panels creates uninterrupted garden abundance Secondary Differentiators: Impasto-style brushwork texture in vinyl print; warm-to-cool color gradient balances energy with sophistication Material & Construction: Splash-proof, scratch-resistant vinyl print on MDF Care Instructions: Dry dust with microfiber cloth every 2-3 weeks; no water or chemicals Ships From: West Bengal Packing: Long-distance transit ready with individual panel protection Quality Check: Before dispatch