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Buddha-bulous 5-Frame Zen-tastic Wall Art displayed above a modern couch
Five-panel Buddha-bulous 5-Frame Zen-tastic Wall Art for calming living room vibes
Buddha-bulous 5-Frame Zen-tastic Wall Art displayed above a modern couch
Five-panel Buddha-bulous 5-Frame Zen-tastic Wall Art for calming living room vibes

Buddha-bulous 5-Frame Zen-tastic Wall Art

Namaste, friend! This Buddha-bulous Wall Art is a five-panel Zen party for your walls. Splash-proof, scratch-resistant, and ready to hang—prepare for guests to ask where you found such chill vibes!

₹ 2,496


Brand : INEP

Description

Bring peace and style home with this Buddha-bulous Wall Art. Five splash-resistant frames on sturdy MDF textures create a serene gallery vibe. Ready to hang and impress—Zen master status unlocked!

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Moolwan 5-Panel Buddha Canvas Wall Art Painting (127×76cm) - Spiritual Multi-Frame Art

You keep opening the product page, trying to mentally place this on your living room wall. But it's impossible to know for sure, isn't it? 127cm looks perfect in mockups, but your wall has windows, maybe a wooden shelf beside the sofa, and that cream paint you've never been quite sure about. You need to know this works in your specific space, not just styled photos.

This 5-panel Buddha canvas painting spans 127cm—roughly the width of a standard Indian door frame. If your wall is the typical 12 feet (360cm) found in most metro apartments, this piece covers about 35% of that width. That leaves approximately 116cm of wall space on each side. Enough breathing room to feel intentional, not cramped. Not so small that it looks like an afterthought above your 6-8 foot sofa.

The deep blue-grey tones dominating this piece won't fight with cream or off-white walls—they'll sink into them, creating depth rather than visual noise. The vermillion accents around the Buddha's crown catch light differently throughout the day: warm and inviting with morning sun, deeper and more meditative under evening LEDs. The bronze and charcoal textures in the carved details photograph darker than they appear in person, which actually works in your favour—they reveal themselves gradually as your eyes adjust.

Why 127cm Works on 12-Foot Walls (and What Happens If You Go Smaller or Bigger)

Here's the math most product pages skip. A 12-foot wall is 360cm. This canvas at 127cm covers 35.3% of that horizontal space. Interior designers typically recommend 30-40% coverage for a balanced focal point—so you're in the sweet spot.

Go smaller (say, 90cm), and you drop to 25% coverage. That might look lost above a standard 200cm sofa, especially if your ceiling is 9-10 feet. Go larger (150cm+), and you risk the piece feeling cramped, particularly if you have windows or furniture within 60cm of the wall edges.

At 76cm height, the canvas sits comfortably in the typical Indian living room's "gallery zone"—about 145-160cm from floor to centre. This puts the Buddha's face at natural eye level when seated, which matters for a contemplative piece like this.

The Colour Science: How Deep Blues and Bronze Look Against Cream Walls

Your walls are probably some variation of Asian Paints' cream, off-white, or that builder's peach that seems mandatory in rental flats. Good news: the blue-grey palette here is specifically forgiving with all three.

Blue-grey tones recede visually, creating an illusion of depth—useful if your living room is the typical 12×14 feet found in 2-3 BHK flats. The warm orange-red vermillion accents (around the crown and applied sindoor) provide just enough contrast to register from across the room without clashing with brown leather or wooden furniture.

If you have brass diyas or a wooden pooja shelf in the same room, the bronze undertones in this piece will echo that warmth. It's not matching—it's harmonising. Different enough to be interesting, similar enough to feel cohesive.

Rental-Friendly Mounting: How to Hang Without Losing Your Deposit

At 3kg total weight distributed across five panels, you're looking at roughly 600 grams per panel. Each panel can hang on a single nail (no need for wall anchors in standard Indian brick-and-plaster construction). If you're protecting a ₹50,000 rental deposit, two 3M Command strips rated for 2kg per strip handle each panel easily—and remove cleanly.

Installation takes 15-20 minutes. The panels ship with pre-attached hooks and a spacing guide. Leave approximately 2-3cm gaps between panels for that gallery-style look. A smartphone level app works fine for alignment—you don't need professional tools.

What You Gain (and Give Up) vs. Single-Panel Buddha Art

Five panels create visual rhythm that a single large canvas can't replicate. Your eye moves across the image, discovering details—the texture of the crown, the shadow falling on the shoulder, the grain of the stone. It's more engaging for daily viewing.

The trade-off? Five panels require more precise alignment during installation. A single panel is more forgiving if your walls aren't perfectly level (many Indian apartments have slight undulations in plaster). If you prefer simpler installation, you sacrifice that progressive reveal effect.

Compared to marketplace canvas prints at ₹800-1,200, the difference is substrate quality. The 340 GSM cotton canvas here holds ink differently than the poly-cotton blends in budget prints. Colours stay truer in high humidity—important during monsoon when your walls might absorb moisture and budget prints start showing warping.

Setting Realistic Expectations: Colours, Lighting, and Your Space

Morning: If your living room gets eastern light, expect the blue-greys to look slightly warmer, and the vermillion accents to glow. This is when the piece looks most inviting.

Afternoon: Direct sunlight (if applicable) will reveal the canvas texture more prominently. The UV-resistant eco-solvent inks prevent fading, but the texture becomes part of the visual experience—painterly rather than photographic.

Evening (LED lighting): Most Indian homes use warm-white LEDs (3000-4000K). Under these, the blue-greys shift toward teal, and the bronze tones become more prominent. The Buddha's face becomes the natural focal point.

One honest note: The splash-proof coating means fingerprints wipe off easily, but it also adds slight sheen. Under direct light at certain angles, you may see minor reflections. This is normal for coated canvas and reduces over the first few weeks as dust settles.

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