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Buddha-blossom Floral Framed Wall Art

Bloom into bliss with this 5-panel floral Buddha Wall Art. Premium vinyl print on framed panels for instant zen vibes and color pops. Hang, relax, repeat!

₹ 2,496


Brand : INEP

Description

Imagine your wall whispering 'om' with every glance. This framed 5-panel floral Buddha Wall Art combines premium vinyl prints and sleek wooden frames to deliver serene vibes in your living room, bedroom, or meditation corner.

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Moolwan 5-Panel Buddha with Lotus Vinyl Wall Art on MDF (127x76cm) – Golden Halo Anchors a Calm Teal Composition

Your Wall Isn't Blank—It's Waiting for Something Specific

You've scrolled through dozens of Buddha wall art options. Some looked too traditional—the kind your aunt has in her pooja room. Others looked cheap, like stretched photographs with oversaturated colors. A few looked promising in the product photos, but you couldn't picture them on your actual wall, next to your actual sofa, under your actual tube lights.

This 127cm Buddha composition solves that specific visualization problem. The golden circular halo behind Buddha's head creates an immediate anchor point—your eye knows exactly where to land. The teal background flows vertically like rain or hanging foliage, but the composition stays grounded because Buddha's centered form and the pink lotus at chest level create stability. The painterly brushstroke texture means this reads as art, not as a photograph blown up to wall size.

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

A 127cm wide piece covers approximately 35-40% of a standard 10-12ft Indian living room wall. This is deliberate: Buddha compositions work best when they don't overwhelm the room with spiritual imagery. You want presence without dominance.

Above an 8-foot sofa (240cm), this 127cm width gives you roughly 53% coverage—right in the optimal range where wall art feels proportional rather than cramped or oversized. The 76cm height sits comfortably between an 8-foot ceiling and typical sofa-back height, leaving appropriate breathing room above and below.

The 5-panel format creates its own visual rhythm across this width. Each panel is approximately 25cm wide with slim gaps between. From your doorway (3-4 meters viewing distance), the panels read as a unified composition. From your sofa (1-1.5 meters), you'll notice the deliberate breaks where Buddha's form flows across panel edges—the halo spans three central panels, the lotus rests on the center panel, the flanking trees occupy the outer panels.

If your wall is narrower (8-9ft), this piece will feel more dominant—which works if Buddha art is the room's intentional focal point. If your wall is wider (14ft+), consider flanking with simple elements rather than additional art, to avoid visual competition.

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

The dominant teal in this composition isn't the cold, clinical teal you see in hospital corridors. It's a warm-leaning turquoise with green undertones—closer to tropical water than to teal paint swatches.

Against cream or off-white walls (standard in most Indian apartments), this teal creates contrast without harshness. The warmth in the color prevents that jarring cool-tone-on-neutral clash that makes some blue art look out of place in Indian homes.

In morning natural light: The golden halo and saffron robe appear more muted, the teals read deeper and more saturated. This is when the painterly texture shows best—side-lighting reveals the implied brushstrokes in the print.

In evening warm LED light (3000K, typical in Indian living rooms): The golds intensify significantly. The halo practically glows. The pink lotuses warm up toward coral. The overall composition feels more unified and deliberately curated.

The gold-and-teal combination works particularly well with brown wooden furniture—coffee tables, TV units, side tables. The gold echoes wood warmth while the teal provides the contrast that prevents everything from blending into a monotone. If you have teal or turquoise accent cushions or curtains, this art will tie that accent color into a deliberate scheme rather than a random choice.

Installation in Indian Walls (Concrete vs Drywall)

Five panels means ten mounting points—two D-rings per panel. This sounds complicated but actually makes leveling easier than single large pieces: each panel hangs independently, so you can micro-adjust individual panels without repositioning the entire artwork.

For concrete walls (most older Indian apartments): Use the included concrete anchors. Drill 6mm holes approximately 35mm deep at each marked point. The hanging template shows exact spacing for all five panels including the gaps between them—follow it precisely and you won't need to measure anything yourself.

For drywall (common in newer constructions and commercial office spaces): Use the included drywall anchors. Same 6mm holes, shallower depth.

At 3kg total weight distributed across five panels, each panel carries only 600 grams—well within the capacity of standard wall anchors. This is lighter per-panel than most framed photographs.

In rentals: Ten small 6mm holes patch more easily than two large holes from heavy single-piece mounting hardware. Standard wall putty, available for ₹50 at any hardware store, fills these invisibly. Your deposit is safe.

Installation time: 25-30 minutes for five panels, including the time you'll spend stepping back to check alignment after each panel. The hanging template eliminates guesswork, but you'll still want to verify visually before committing to each panel's position.

Why This Works Better Than Macrame Wall Hangings

Macrame Buddha designs have become common—you'll find them on every handicraft marketplace. They have a certain boho appeal. But here's what they don't offer:

Visual precision: Macrame creates texture, not imagery. You get a vague Buddha silhouette at best. This vinyl print captures specific details—the serene closed-eye expression, the delicate lotus petals, the radiating lines in the golden halo. From across the room, you see Buddha. From close up, you see the artistic choices in color and composition.

Color stability: Natural macrame fibers fade, absorb dust, and discolor with humidity exposure. In Mumbai monsoons or Chennai humidity, macrame looks tired within a year. Vinyl on MDF wipes clean and doesn't absorb atmospheric moisture.

Dimensional presence: Macrame hangs flat against walls and moves with air currents. The five rigid MDF panels create actual depth and stay exactly where you position them. No drooping, no swaying, no re-straightening after you turn on the ceiling fan.

Visual weight: For a 10-12ft wall above an 8-foot sofa, macrame of equivalent size looks insubstantial—like an afterthought rather than a deliberate design choice. The saturated colors and defined edges of this vinyl print hold their own against furniture and architecture.

What This Will Actually Feel Like in Your Room

From your doorway: The golden halo registers first—a warm circular glow against the cooler teal field. Then Buddha's centered form. The five-panel format reads as unified from this distance; you won't consciously notice the gaps unless you look for them.

From your sofa: The details become apparent. The brushstroke texture in the background. The way the teal varies from deep navy at the edges to bright turquoise near the center. The pink lotuses scattered like offerings. The specific expression on Buddha's face—serene but not saccharine.

This piece dominates its wall section. It's not subtle background art that guests might not notice. It's a deliberate statement: someone who lives here chose this specific Buddha composition, in these specific colors, at this specific scale. Whether that reads as spiritual, aesthetic, or both depends on your existing room context and how you introduce it to visitors.

For a meditation corner or dedicated spiritual space, this works as the primary focal point. For a general living room, it works above a sofa where it anchors the seating area without requiring religious interpretation—the contemporary color palette lets it function as art first, spiritual symbolism second.

Adjacent décor: Keep it minimal. A simple plant, perhaps. Neutral-toned cushions. This composition contains enough visual information—adding competing art or busy décor will create clutter rather than curation.


Moolwan Design Note The golden halo in this composition uses textured brushwork lines radiating outward—a detail that distinguishes it from flat graphic Buddha art. This radial texture catches light differently throughout the day, giving the halo subtle movement even in a static image.

Moolwan Quality Standard Splash-proof vinyl print on MDF construction, designed for Indian humidity conditions. Packed for long-distance transit across India. Each panel quality checked before dispatch. Ships from West Bengal.

Moolwan Fit Guidance for Indian Homes At 127cm width, this fits living room walls of 10-12ft with balanced visual coverage. Position 20-25cm above sofa back. The teal-gold palette complements cream walls and brown wooden furniture without requiring accent color coordination.


Quick Specifications


Frequently Asked Questions

Will 127cm be too wide for my wall? For walls 10-12ft wide, 127cm provides 35-40% coverage—visually balanced without overwhelming the space. If your wall is narrower than 9ft, this piece will dominate more strongly, which works if Buddha art is your intended focal point.

How will the teal and gold look against my cream walls? The teal in this composition leans warm (turquoise with green undertones) rather than cold, so it contrasts without clashing against cream or off-white walls. The gold intensifies under warm LED lighting typical in Indian homes, creating a cohesive warm-toned effect in evening viewing.

Is this difficult to install with five separate panels? The included hanging template marks exact positions for all five panels including spacing. Each panel is independently adjustable, which actually makes leveling easier than single large pieces. Total installation time is 25-30 minutes.

Will the colors fade in humidity? Vinyl prints don't absorb moisture the way canvas does. The splash-proof surface resists humidity-related degradation. Through monsoon seasons, the colors remain stable—no warping, no moisture absorption, no gradual fading.

How do I clean dust off the panels? Dry microfiber cloth every 2-3 weeks. The vinyl surface doesn't embed dust the way textured materials do—it wipes clean easily. Avoid water or cleaning chemicals.


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