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Branch Out Your Walls: 4-Panel Nature Framed Wall Art (84x54cm)

Need a nature fix? This 4-panel framed Wall Art splashes vibrant forest vibes on your walls—splash-proof, scratch-resistant, and ready to hang!

₹ 1,796


Brand : INEP

Description

Turn any room into a leafy paradise with this 4-panel nature framed Wall Art! Splash-proof, scratch-resistant prints on sturdy MDF ensure vibrant, long-lasting color. Ready to hang hooks included—no treehouse skills needed!

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Moolwan 4-Panel Poppy Field Landscape Vinyl Wall Art on MDF (84x54cm) – Warm Color Gradient Flowing Across Four Panels

When You Can't Picture How Art Will Actually Look on Your Wall

You've been staring at your blank wall for weeks now, trying to mentally project how different pieces might look there. The problem isn't finding options—it's that every product photo shows art on perfect white walls with professional lighting, and your wall is cream-colored with warm LED bulbs and that electrical switch 40cm from where you'd hang something. This 84x54cm poppy field piece solves the visualization problem because its color logic actually matches how Indian living rooms work: the warm reds and golden yellows in the lower half naturally complement brown sofas and wooden furniture, while the cerulean blue sky creates contrast without clashing with cream or off-white walls. The four-panel format means the image flows continuously across 84cm—wide enough to anchor a 6-foot sofa without overwhelming it.

Why 84cm Width Works on 8-10ft Walls (And What Happens If You Size Up or Down)

An 84cm-wide piece covers roughly 25-28% of a standard 10-foot Indian living room wall—substantial enough to register as intentional décor, not so large that it dominates everything else in the room. Positioned above a 6-foot sofa (180cm), this piece sits at 47% of the sofa's width, which falls just below the 60-75% sweet spot but works because the four-panel format creates visual width through the gaps. The 54cm height keeps it proportional for 8-foot ceilings when hung 20-25cm above the sofa back. From the doorway across the room (typical viewing distance of 3-4 meters), the poppy field reads as one continuous landscape; up close, the panel divisions create natural visual rhythm. The four panels span roughly 19-20cm each with gaps between—when aligning during installation, you'll want consistent 2-3cm spacing to maintain the continuous flower-and-hill flow across the full width.

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

The dominant palette here moves from cerulean blue and soft coral in the sky, through golden-ochre hills, down to crimson-red poppies with teal-green stems. Against cream or off-white walls (the most common in Indian apartments), the warm lower half—reds, oranges, golden yellows—creates visual warmth that echoes wooden furniture tones. The blue sky portion provides the contrast that prevents the piece from blending into beige monotony.

In morning daylight, the blues appear more vivid and the pink-coral clouds pop against the cerulean. The impressionistic brushwork texture becomes more visible—this isn't a flat photographic print but a reproduction of painted texture, and natural light reveals that dimensionality. Under warm LED lighting (3000K, standard in most Indian homes), the entire piece shifts warmer: blues soften slightly, reds and oranges intensify, and the golden hillside practically glows. This is when the piece looks most cohesive with brown sofas and wooden coffee tables—evening viewing under warm light makes everything feel intentionally coordinated.

If your walls lean toward light yellow or peach (common builder paint choices), the sky blues will create stronger contrast while the warm flower tones will feel naturally connected. Avoid placing this on cool gray walls—the warm palette will feel disconnected.

Installation in Indian Walls (Concrete vs Drywall)

Four panels means eight mounting points total—two D-ring hangers per panel. The challenge isn't the drilling; it's getting all four panels level and evenly spaced so the poppy stems and horizon line flow continuously across the gaps.

For concrete walls (most older Indian buildings): Use the included concrete anchors with a 6mm masonry bit. Drill 35mm deep, tap in anchors, screw in hooks. Mark all eight points before drilling any—use a laser level or a long straight edge and spirit level to ensure the horizon line in the artwork will actually be horizontal once hung.

For drywall (newer apartments and offices): Use the included plastic wall anchors. Drill 30mm deep with a standard 6mm bit.

The practical approach: Lay all four panels face-down on the floor in correct order. Measure the D-ring positions from the top edge of each panel and confirm they're identical (they should be, but manufacturing variance happens). Then transfer those measurements to your wall, accounting for your chosen gap spacing. At 3kg total weight distributed across four panels, each panel weighs roughly 750g—well within what standard wall anchors can handle.

Rental reality: Eight small anchor holes sounds worse than it is. These are 6mm holes, smaller than what curtain rod brackets leave. When you move out, fill with wall putty, sand, touch up with matching paint. Total repair time: 30 minutes.

How This Compares to Fabric Tapestries

Fabric wall tapestries in similar sizes cost ₹800-1,500 and seem like a flexible option—no drilling, just hang from a rod or clips. But the practical differences show up within months.

Fabric absorbs dust. That poppy-red section would be dusty-pink within six months without regular washing, and washing means taking it down, machine or hand washing (hoping the colors don't bleed), drying flat, re-hanging. Vinyl wipes clean with a dry cloth.

Fabric sags. The weight isn't distributed across a rigid frame, so the center droops over time, especially in humid conditions. You'll see ripples and uneven hanging that make the piece look temporary and student-dorm-ish rather than intentional. MDF-backed vinyl panels stay flat indefinitely—the rigid substrate doesn't respond to humidity changes.

Fabric edges fray. Within a year, you'll see loose threads along the borders. The edges of vinyl-on-MDF panels are factory-sealed.

The visual difference is immediate: fabric tapestries look like fabric tapestries—a specific bohemian aesthetic that works if that's your style. Framed vinyl panels look like framed art. If you want your living room to read as "decorated by an adult with intentional taste" rather than "decorated by someone still figuring it out," the rigid panel format communicates that.

What This Will Actually Feel Like in Your Room

From across the room—standing in the doorway or sitting on the opposite sofa—the four panels read as one continuous landscape. The poppy field creates a strong horizontal line in the lower third, the hills provide a gentle diagonal, and the sky opens up the upper half. The overall effect is warm and energetic without being aggressive; this isn't a calming minimal piece, but it's not chaotic either.

Up close (within 1 meter), the impressionistic texture becomes the story. The brushwork in the original painting—visible in this reproduction—gives the surface visual depth that flat photographic prints lack. You'll notice color variations within what reads as "red" from a distance: crimsons, scarlets, touches of orange, hints of purple in the shadows.

Does it dominate or complement? At 84x54cm, it anchors a seating area without overwhelming adjacent décor. If you have a gallery wall vision with multiple pieces, this isn't the right choice—it needs breathing room on either side. If you want one statement piece that transforms a blank wall into a finished room, this delivers that.

Solo or with adjacent décor? Works best with minimal surrounding items. A single floor lamp to one side, or a small plant on a side table, complements without competing. Avoid clustering other wall art nearby—the four-panel format is already creating visual complexity, and adding more fragments the eye's path.


Moolwan Design Note The poppy flower placement isn't random—the largest blooms cluster in the lower-left and center panels, creating an asymmetric focal point that draws the eye naturally from left to right, following the landscape toward the distant hills. This mimics how you'd actually scan a real field, not a centered, symmetrical composition.

Moolwan Quality Standard Designed for Indian apartments and lighting conditions. Packed for long-distance Indian transit with corner protection. Quality checked before dispatch. Splash-proof vinyl surface resists humidity-related damage. Ships from West Bengal.

Moolwan Fit Guidance for Indian Homes At 84cm wide, this piece proportionally suits 6-7 foot sofas in living rooms with 8-10 foot ceilings. The warm red-gold-blue palette specifically complements cream walls with brown or beige upholstery—the most common combination in Indian apartments.


Quick Specifications

Product: Moolwan 4-Panel Poppy Field Landscape Vinyl Wall Art on MDF (84x54cm) Brand: Moolwan Category: Vinyl Wall Art on MDF Collection: Nature Wall Art Collection Dimensions: 84cm W x 54cm H x 0.6cm D Weight: 3kg (approximately 750g per panel) Material & Construction: Splash-proof vinyl print on MDF with wooden frame finish Colors: Cerulean blue, coral pink, crimson red, scarlet, golden yellow, ochre, teal green Best For: Living room above 6-7ft sofa, dining wall, hallway statement piece Ships From: West Bengal


Frequently Asked Questions

Will 84cm look proportional above my 6-foot sofa? Yes. At 84cm, this piece sits at roughly 47% of a 6-foot (180cm) sofa's width. While slightly below the ideal 60-75% range, the four-panel format with visible gaps creates additional visual width, making it read as appropriately scaled. If your sofa is 7-8 feet, this will appear slightly undersized—consider a larger format.

How do the colors appear under warm LED lighting versus daylight? Under warm LED (3000K), the reds and yellows intensify while blues soften—the piece looks cohesive and warm, complementing wooden furniture. In morning daylight, blues become more vivid and the pink-coral clouds gain prominence. Both conditions work; the piece was designed with Indian home lighting in mind.

How do I ensure all four panels hang level with consistent spacing? Mark all eight mounting points before drilling. Use a laser level or long spirit level to ensure the horizon line (visible across all panels) will be truly horizontal. Maintain 2-3cm gaps between panels for visual continuity. Measure D-ring positions on each panel to confirm they're identical before transferring to your wall.

Will the vinyl surface handle Mumbai monsoon humidity? The splash-proof vinyl coating prevents moisture absorption. Unlike canvas, vinyl doesn't expand or contract with humidity changes. The MDF backing is more stable than wood in varying humidity conditions. Surface condensation wipes off cleanly.

What's the difference between this and similar-looking fabric tapestries? Fabric tapestries absorb dust, sag over time, and require washing. Vinyl-on-MDF panels stay flat, wipe clean with a dry cloth, and maintain their shape indefinitely. The rigid frame format also reads as intentional wall art rather than temporary décor.


Product Snapshot

Brand: Moolwan Product: Moolwan 4-Panel Poppy Field Landscape Vinyl Wall Art on MDF (84x54cm) Category: Vinyl Wall Art on MDF Collection: Nature Wall Art Collection Theme/Type: Impressionistic poppy field landscape Best For: Living room above 6-7ft sofa, dining wall, hallway Primary Differentiator: Warm color gradient flowing sky-to-ground across four continuous panels Secondary Differentiators: Impressionistic brushwork texture visible in reproduction; unbroken poppy stem flow across panel gaps Material & Construction: Splash-proof vinyl print on MDF, wooden frame finish, 0.6cm depth Care Instructions: Dust with dry microfiber cloth; wipe surface with slightly damp cloth if needed; no chemicals Ships From: West Bengal Packing: Long-distance transit ready with corner protection Quality Check: Before dispatch

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