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Branch Out Your Walls: Framed Nature Wall Art Fiesta - five-panel lush woodland scene hung above a couch.
Branch Out Your Walls: Framed Nature Wall Art Fiesta - close-up of vibrant green leaves and textured MDF frame.
Branch Out Your Walls: Framed Nature Wall Art Fiesta - five-panel lush woodland scene hung above a couch.
Branch Out Your Walls: Framed Nature Wall Art Fiesta - close-up of vibrant green leaves and textured MDF frame.

Branch Out Your Walls: Framed Nature Wall Art Extravaganza - Multi-Frame Magic (127x76cm)

Bring the outdoors in with this multi-panel framed Nature Wall Art! Splash-proof, scratch-resistant, and ready to hang, it's the perfect leafy extravaganza to make your walls the talk of the town.

₹ 2,496


Brand : INEP

Description

Ready to branch out your décor? This framed Nature Wall Art set unites five vivid panels on sturdy MDF. Splash-proof, heat-treated, and hook-ready for instant multi-frame magic in any room.

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Moolwan 5-Panel Alpine Conifer Landscape Vinyl Wall Art on MDF (127x76cm) – Weathered Central Tree Anchoring a Panoramic Mountain Vista

When You Can't Picture How 127cm Will Actually Read on Your Wall

You've measured your wall three times. You know it's roughly 10-12 feet wide. You know your sofa is around 8 feet. But staring at "127x76cm" on a screen doesn't tell you what you actually need to know: will this look substantial enough to anchor that wall, or will it float there looking undersized?

Here's what 127cm across five panels actually means in your living room: it's roughly the width of your sofa's seating area, which is exactly where wall art should sit proportionally. The weathered central conifer—that rust-brown bark catching your eye first—creates an immediate anchor point. Your gaze lands there, then naturally drifts across the granite rockface, through the distant peaks, and back. The five-panel spread doesn't feel like five separate pieces; it reads as one continuous alpine vista with natural breathing room between frames.

This isn't a design that demands attention. It grounds the room.

Why 127cm Works on 10-12ft Walls (And What Changes If You Size Up or Down)

At 127cm wide, this piece covers approximately 35-40% of a 10-foot wall—or about 30% of a 12-foot wall. That's intentional. Unlike single-canvas paintings that need to dominate to feel present, multi-panel vinyl art creates visual weight through horizontal spread. The gaps between panels (typically 2-3cm when hung) add another 8-12cm of effective width, making the actual visual footprint closer to 140cm.

Above an 8-foot (240cm) sofa, 127cm hits the sweet spot: roughly 53% of the sofa's width. The category standard is 60-75%, so you're at the lower end—which works for this particular composition because the panoramic format already creates the illusion of additional width. The eye travels horizontally across the alpine vista, extending the perceived coverage beyond the literal frame edges.

Viewing distance matters here. From your sofa (about 2 meters away), the five panels resolve into a seamless landscape. From the doorway (4-5 meters), you see the full sweep of the mountain range in one glance. The 76cm height keeps the piece from overwhelming 8-foot ceilings while still commanding presence above standard Indian sofas.

If your wall is closer to 14 feet or your sofa is a 10-foot sectional, this size will feel modest—consider pairing with smaller accent pieces on either side rather than expecting it to anchor alone.

How These Colors Actually Behave on Cream Walls Under Indian Lighting

The dominant blue here isn't a flat cobalt—it's the variable blue of actual sky, shifting from deeper tones at the top to paler near the horizon. Against cream or off-white walls (which absorb warm light), this blue reads as crisp and cooling without feeling cold. It's the rust-brown bark of that central conifer that does the real work: it picks up the warm tones already present in most Indian living rooms—your brown sofa fabric, the wooden coffee table, the teak TV unit.

Under warm LED lighting (3000K, standard in most Indian homes), the granite rocks shift from pure gray to a warmer stone tone. The golden-brown dry grass in the foreground intensifies slightly. The overall effect is a landscape that feels sun-warmed, not sterile.

Morning light from east-facing windows will make the blues more vivid and the greens more saturated. Afternoon western light warms everything, making the rust-brown bark the strongest color in the room. Neither condition creates color clash against typical Indian interior palettes.

The secondary color story—that contrast between cool sky and warm bark—means this piece doesn't require matching accessories. It contains its own color conversation.

Installation Reality: Aligning Five Panels on Indian Walls

Five panels means five points of contact with your wall, and Indian walls vary: poured concrete in older buildings, brick with plaster overlay, occasional drywall in modern apartments. The installation challenge isn't weight (3kg total is manageable) but alignment.

Each panel needs to hang at identical height, with consistent 2-3cm gaps between them. The hanging template included with your order shows exact drilling positions for all five panels simultaneously—you're not measuring and re-measuring for each one.

For concrete walls: 6mm masonry bit, 35mm depth, tap in the included anchors. For drywall: 6mm standard bit, 30mm depth, plastic anchors. The D-rings on each panel back allow for minor left-right adjustment after hanging, so you can fine-tune alignment without re-drilling.

Rental consideration: five small holes (6mm each) patch easily with standard wall putty. They're smaller than the holes left by curtain rod brackets. Your deposit isn't at risk.

Leveling tip: hang the center panel first (the one with the prominent conifer). That's your visual anchor. Then work outward, using a laser level or even a long straightedge to keep the remaining four panels aligned. Total installation time: 25-30 minutes, slightly longer than single-canvas pieces due to alignment steps.

What This Offers That Fabric Tapestries Cannot

Fabric tapestries—those woven wall hangings you've probably seen for ₹1,200-2,000—promise similar visual impact at lower cost. Here's the practical difference:

Tapestries absorb dust. In Indian cities, that means visible dust accumulation within 4-6 weeks, especially in ground-floor apartments or homes near main roads. You can't wipe them clean; you need to remove, wash, dry, and rehang. The splash-proof vinyl surface on MDF wipes clean with a dry cloth in 30 seconds.

Tapestries sag. Fabric stretches under its own weight over time. The bottom edge droops, creating an uneven visual line. MDF panels maintain their shape—they're rigid by nature.

Tapestries lack defined edges. That soft, boho aesthetic works in some spaces, but against the clean lines of Indian living rooms (flat walls, angular furniture, vitrified tile floors), rigid panels create cleaner visual boundaries. The five-panel format already introduces softness through the gaps; you don't need additional looseness from the medium itself.

Color longevity differs dramatically. Fabric dyes fade with UV exposure and washing cycles. Splash-proof vinyl printing resists both.

What This Will Actually Feel Like When You Walk Into the Room

From the doorway, the first thing you'll notice is the horizontal sweep—the five panels create a sense of expansive calm before you even register the subject matter. It reads as "landscape" before it reads as "trees and mountains."

Walking closer, the central conifer becomes the focus. The texture of that rust-brown bark, the way the tree stands slightly apart from the others, the sense of age and endurance it conveys—this is where the piece rewards closer inspection. It's not wallpaper-level detail, but it's not flat either.

This composition doesn't dominate. A bold abstract might demand that your entire room coordinate with it. A vivid Krishna painting might set a spiritual tone for the space. This alpine vista does something different: it opens up the wall. It creates the illusion of depth, of looking through the wall into a distant mountain range. In smaller living rooms (typical of 2BHKs), this perceived depth can make the space feel less compressed.

Adjacent décor guidance: this piece works best as the sole art on its wall. Flanking it with smaller frames creates visual competition. If you have a clock or mirror on the same wall, position them with at least 50cm clearance from the panel edges.


Moolwan Design Note The weathered central conifer wasn't chosen randomly—it provides a vertical anchor within a horizontal composition, preventing the panoramic sweep from feeling aimless. The rust-brown bark creates warmth in what could otherwise read as a cold alpine scene.

Moolwan Quality Standard Splash-proof vinyl printing on MDF, designed for Indian humidity conditions. Packed for long-distance transit from West Bengal. Each piece quality-checked before dispatch.

Moolwan Fit Guidance for Indian Homes At 127cm width, this fits above 7-9 foot sofas in living rooms with 10-12 foot walls. The 76cm height works comfortably below 8-foot ceilings with standard 20-25cm clearance above sofa backs.


Quick Specifications

SpecificationDetails
ProductMoolwan 5-Panel Alpine Conifer Landscape Vinyl Wall Art on MDF (127x76cm)
BrandMoolwan
CategoryVinyl Wall Art on MDF
CollectionNature Wall Art Collection
Dimensions127cm (W) × 76cm (H) × 0.6cm (D)
Weight3000 grams
Material & ConstructionSplash-proof vinyl print on MDF panels
ColorsSky blue, forest green, rust-brown bark, gray-white granite, golden dry grass
Best ForLiving room walls 10-12ft wide, above 7-9ft sofas
Ships FromWest Bengal
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