Buddha-tiful 5-Panel Buddha Meditation Canvas Wall Art Painting (127x76cm) - Golden Blessing Pose
You might have browsed dozens of Buddha paintings by now. Some felt too small—a 60cm Buddha looked more like accent art than a meditation focal point, lost on your 12-foot bedroom wall. Some felt too large—a 150cm piece might work for a dedicated meditation room, but in your bedroom or living room corner, it would dominate the entire wall and feel more like temple art than home décor. You probably kept coming back to this size—127cm—because intuitively, it feels balanced. But you want to be sure.
Here's why this is the one: 127cm covers about one-third of a standard 12-foot (360cm) bedroom or living room wall—leaving 115cm of breathing room on each side. This creates a peaceful focal point without making the room feel like a shrine. Your wall probably has other elements—maybe your bed extends 6 feet across, maybe you have a side table and reading lamp, maybe there's a window 3-4 feet away. The 127cm width works with these elements instead of competing with them. And at 76cm tall, this fits comfortably above a bed headboard (hanging 15-20cm above the headboard top) or on a meditation room wall under 8-10 foot ceilings without reaching awkwardly close to the ceiling line. The five-panel layout creates vertical rhythm—the tallest center panel draws your eye to Buddha's face, while the flanking panels create depth and dimension.
And the colors—warm golds, bronze, and soft amber—these aren't the bright metallic golds that look garish against home walls. These are warm, meditative golds. Golds with enough depth and gradient that they read as calming, not flashy. Your bedroom or meditation corner walls are probably cream, off-white, or that light yellow shade many Indian apartments have. Your furniture is probably wooden (teak or sheesham headboard, wooden side tables) or upholstered in browns and beiges. This canvas will feel like it was chosen specifically for that combination—like someone who understands both spirituality and aesthetics lives here.
Your bedroom wall is probably 10 to 12 feet wide (300-360cm in most Indian 2BHK and 3BHK apartments). If you're planning this for a meditation corner in your living room or a dedicated pooja room, the wall might be 8-12 feet. Here's the visual math:
127cm Buddha canvas on a 12-foot (360cm) wall:
116cm of space on the left side
116cm of space on the right side
Coverage ratio: Canvas covers 35% of wall width
Effect: Anchored, meditative, balanced—not floating, not overwhelming
Now consider your room context:
Your bed is probably 5-6 feet (150-180cm) wide if it's a queen, sitting with the headboard against this wall
Hanging height: 15-20cm above headboard top puts Buddha's face at perfect eye level when you're sitting up in bed or standing 6-8 feet away
Side elements: You probably have bedside tables (18-24 inches wide each), maybe a floor lamp, maybe a dresser on the adjacent wall
The 127cm width centers above your bed without crowding your bedside tables or feeling cramped
If you're hanging this in a meditation/pooja corner:
The wall space might be 8-10 feet wide (a corner of your living room or bedroom)
127cm fills this space beautifully—large enough to be a focal point for meditation, not so large it looks out of scale for a home (versus a temple)
You probably have a small meditation cushion, incense holder, or pooja items below—the 76cm height leaves room for these elements at eye level when seated
If you went with 90cm instead:
25% wall coverage—looks like secondary art, not a meditation focal point
On a 12 ft wall above a queen bed, you'll have 135cm of empty space on each side
Effect: Your eye notices the empty wall space more than the Buddha
Specific problem: For meditation rooms, it feels undersized—not substantial enough to anchor your practice
If you went with 150cm instead:
42% wall coverage—works if you have a completely blank wall in a large bedroom
But if you have a standard 5-6 ft bed with nightstands, the 150cm width will extend too close to your bedside tables
Effect: Makes the wall feel full, but crowds the furniture arrangement
Specific problem: In meditation corners or smaller rooms, it feels more like temple-scale art than home-scale spirituality
The 127cm is the mindful choice: substantial enough to be a meditation focal point, proportional enough to work in bedrooms and living room corners, sized appropriately for home spirituality (not overwhelming like temple art).
The five-panel layout creates another benefit: instead of one flat 127cm image, you get dimensional depth. The center panel (approximately 40cm wide, 76cm tall) features Buddha's full figure. The four flanking panels (each approximately 24cm wide, varying heights creating the stepped effect) show the soft-focus background, creating a sense of Buddha emerging from peaceful light. This multi-dimensional effect makes the wall feel more engaging—your eye travels across the composition, enhancing the meditative quality rather than just seeing a flat photograph.
You've seen bright gold Buddha paintings online. The kind that look stunning in product photos against pure white walls—but you're pretty sure they'd look garish in your actual bedroom with its cream walls, wooden furniture, and warm LED lighting.
Here's what makes this different: the color palette is warm golds, bronze, and amber with a soft gradient background—not bright metallic gold. Think of the difference between a golden-hour photograph and a gold-painted statue. This is the former.
In your actual bedroom or meditation space:
Morning light (7-9am, if your room faces east): The warm golds look gentle and welcoming. The soft-focus background gradient (beige to golden amber) catches morning sun without creating glare. This is when the canvas looks most serene—perfect for morning meditation or waking up to peaceful energy.
Afternoon light (2-5pm, if your room has windows): The golden tones intensify slightly but remain warm, not bright. Because eco-solvent inks maintain color consistency (unlike cheap inks that wash out in bright light), Buddha's face retains its detailed shading and dimension even when sunlight hits the canvas. The five-panel layout creates subtle shadows between panels, adding depth.
Evening/artificial light (LED warm white, 3000K—standard in Indian homes): This is when the canvas truly glows. The warm golds read as calming and spiritual. The gradient background creates a soft halo effect around Buddha. Your bedroom lighting probably comes from a ceiling fixture or bedside lamps—either way, the warm tones make the entire meditation corner feel intentional and peaceful.
Against cream/off-white walls (most common in Indian bedrooms): The warm gold Buddha stands out clearly without harsh contrast. The soft beige-to-gold background gradient transitions naturally into your cream walls, creating visual continuity. It doesn't look like art slapped onto a wall—it looks integrated into the room.
Against light yellow walls (common in older apartments): The golden tones harmonize beautifully. Both are warm colors in the same family. The Buddha becomes a focal point through subject matter (the figure, the spiritual meaning) rather than through color contrast.
With wooden furniture (teak/sheesham bed frames, wooden side tables, wooden pooja shelves): Natural wood tones (browns, honey tones) and the golden Buddha create a cohesive palette. The warmth of wood + warmth of gold = a room that feels grounded and calm.
With beige/brown upholstered furniture (if this is in your living room meditation corner): Same principle—warm tones throughout. The golden Buddha doesn't clash; it complements.
What about the bright magenta chairs in the product photo? That's styling, not reality. Your home probably doesn't have hot pink furniture. But here's what that styling tells you: even against an unexpected bold color, the warm golds hold their peaceful quality. In your actual cream-and-brown home, it will look even more harmonious.
The spiritual appropriateness question: This is home-scale Buddha art, not temple-scale. The meditating Buddha in blessing pose (right hand raised in Abhaya Mudra—the gesture of fearlessness and peace) is appropriate for bedrooms, meditation corners, living rooms, or pooja areas. It's respectful in scale and imagery. Your family—even traditional elders—will see this as spiritual décor, not as overly modern or inappropriate. The photographic style (realistic golden statue) rather than illustrated or abstract interpretation keeps it culturally familiar and acceptable.
Let's address the reality: your last canvas painting—the one you bought from a marketplace for ₹1,200—started showing problems after the first monsoon season. The canvas developed slight ripples at the edges. The colors faded in patches where morning sun hit the wall. By the second monsoon, one corner of the frame was visibly warped, creating a gap between frame and wall.
This happens because cheap canvas isn't built for Indian climates. And Indian climates are brutal:
Mumbai bedrooms: 70-85% humidity during monsoons, coastal salt air year-round
Bangalore bedrooms: 15-degree temperature swings between night (12°C) and afternoon (28°C)
Chennai bedrooms: Relentless sun exposure through east-facing windows plus 80% humidity
Delhi bedrooms: 5°C winter mornings, 40°C summer afternoons, sudden monsoon humidity spikes
Pune/Hyderabad bedrooms: Dust accumulation followed by heavy monsoon moisture
Here's how this Buddha canvas handles these conditions:
Moisture-resistant coating (the "splash-proof" feature mentioned): A polymer layer seals the canvas surface. During monsoons, when your bedroom humidity hits 80%, moisture vapor can't penetrate the canvas fibers. The canvas maintains its tension—no rippling, no sagging. This is the same coating technology used on outdoor banners that survive rain and sun. It's not marketing—it's structural protection.
Kiln-dried pinewood frame (dried to 12% moisture content): The wood is pre-dried below the typical moisture equilibrium for Indian climates (14-18% ambient moisture). What this means: the wood won't absorb atmospheric moisture and expand during monsoons. Your frame stays dimensionally stable. No warping, no corners pulling away from the wall, no gaps developing.
UV-resistant eco-solvent inks: That east-facing bedroom window that floods your room with 3-4 hours of direct morning sun? These inks won't fade. The warm golds will look the same two years from now. Cheap dye-based inks turn brownish and washed-out within 6-12 months of sun exposure. Eco-solvent inks are chemically stable—tested for outdoor signage durability.
Does this matter if you run AC in your bedroom? Maybe less, but you're not running AC 24/7 year-round. Your canvas hangs through power cuts, through the weeks you're traveling, through nights when you open windows for fresh air. It experiences your room's actual environmental conditions—not controlled laboratory conditions.
And if you're in a rental apartment? This matters even more. You can't control building humidity. The walls might retain moisture from previous monsoons. Your landlord's paint job might trap dampness. Canvas that can handle real-world conditions is the difference between art that lasts your entire 3-year tenancy and art you're replacing every year.
Cleaning for longevity: Dust with a dry microfiber cloth every 2-3 weeks. That's it. No water, no cleaning chemicals, no furniture polish. The moisture-resistant coating means dust sits on the surface instead of embedding in the canvas weave—it wipes away cleanly. This keeps Buddha's golden face looking pristine and your meditation space feeling well-maintained.
You're probably in a rental. Your lease agreement says something vague about "no major wall damage." Your deposit is ₹50,000-₹75,000, and you'd like to get it back when you move out in 2-3 years. So when you imagine drilling holes for a 3kg canvas, you're thinking: "Is this going to cost me my deposit?"
Short answer: No. Here's why:
What this canvas requires:
2 small anchor holes (6mm diameter, 30-35mm deep)
Total installation time: 15-20 minutes
Damage when you move out: Fillable with ₹50 wall putty and touch-up paint
What actually costs you your deposit:
Wall-mounted TV bracket holes (12mm diameter, 80mm deep, multiple holes)
Heavy shelving with 6-8 large holes
Failed drilling attempts creating clusters of holes
Large holes poorly patched with visible bumps
The small 6mm holes for canvas art are smaller than the holes left by standard picture frames. When you move out: fill with wall putty (any hardware store, ₹50), sand smooth with fine sandpaper (2 minutes), touch up with a tiny dab of matching wall paint. Your landlord will never notice. Total repair cost: ₹200 and 20 minutes of effort.
Here's exactly how to install without anxiety:
Step 1: Identify your wall type
Tap the wall with your knuckles
Hollow sound = drywall (common in modern apartments built after 2010)
Solid sound = concrete (common in older buildings)
If you see smooth white panels = drywall
If you see slightly textured cement = concrete
Step 2: Use the included hanging template
The paper template shows you exactly where to drill
Tape it to your wall at the height you want (15-20cm above bed headboard, or at eye level for meditation room)
Mark the two drilling points with a pencil through the template holes
Remove template—you now have precise marks
Step 3: Drill appropriately for your wall type
For drywall:
Use the included plastic wall anchors
Use a 6mm drill bit (included or ₹40 at hardware store)
Drill 30mm deep (mark the bit with tape at 30mm so you don't drill too deep)
Insert plastic anchors by hand or with gentle hammer taps
Screw in the included hooks
Hang canvas using the D-rings on the frame back
For concrete:
Use the included concrete anchors
Use a 6mm masonry bit (₹60 at hardware store if not included)
Drill 35mm deep (again, mark your bit)
Tap in concrete anchors with a hammer
Screw in hooks
Hang canvas
Step 4: Level check
Hang the canvas
Step back to doorway (8-10 feet)
Is it level? Use your phone's level app or a basic bubble level (₹80)
Adjust if needed—the D-ring hooks allow 1-2cm of adjustment
Total time: 15-20 minutes including the part where you stand back five times to make sure it's perfectly centered above your bed.
Common mistake to avoid: Don't use Command strips for a 3kg canvas this size. Command strips are rated for lighter frames. A 127cm canvas with glass-free framing weighs 3kg—borderline for Command strips, and you don't want a ₹2,496 canvas crashing off your wall at 2am because the adhesive failed in monsoon humidity.
Proper anchors are rental-friendly AND secure. The holes are tiny, easily repairable, and your Buddha stays safely on the wall through monsoons, earthquakes (if you're in a seismic zone), and accidental bumps.
You've seen similar 5-panel Buddha canvases on marketplace sites for ₹1,200-₹1,500. Same size description (127cm). Same "5-panel" label. Same Buddha imagery. So why spend ₹2,496 here?
Because you're not comparing the same product. You're comparing a photograph of a canvas to an actual canvas that will hang in your bedroom for 3-5 years.
Here's what the ₹1,296 price difference actually buys you:
1. Canvas weight that won't sag: Marketplace canvas is typically 180-220 GSM (grams per square meter). It's thin. You can see the wooden frame outline through the canvas if you hold it up to light. Within 6-8 months, it develops visible ripples because the canvas loses tension.
This canvas: 340 GSM cotton canvas. It has actual substance. The weave is dense—you can't see through it. It stays drum-tight on the frame through multiple monsoon cycles. When someone touches it (guests always touch Buddha art—it's instinctive), it feels like quality canvas, not poster paper.
2. Inks that won't fade in your sunny bedroom: Marketplace sellers use dye-based inkjet printing. These inks fade visibly within 6-12 months if your bedroom gets morning sun. The golden Buddha turns brownish-beige. The gradient background washes out to flat tan. You'll notice it one day and think, "Wait, wasn't this more golden when I bought it?"
Eco-solvent inks (what this uses) are chemically stable. They're tested for outdoor UV exposure. Two years from now, Buddha's warm gold face will still have the same depth and richness. Your sunrise meditation won't be staring at faded, sad-looking art.
3. Frame construction that survives climate swings: Cheap frames use 0.75-inch or 1-inch stretcher bars made from untreated or minimally treated wood. In Indian humidity cycles—monsoon moisture followed by dry heat, followed by monsoon again—this wood warps. The canvas loosens. You'll see ripples forming at panel edges within one monsoon season.
This frame: 1.5-inch kiln-dried pinewood with corner bracing. The wood is dried to 12% moisture content specifically to prevent warping in Indian climates. The canvas is stretched with even tension using pneumatic tools (not hand-stapled unevenly). Three years later, your canvas will still be perfectly taut.
4. Actually appropriate installation hardware: Marketplace listings say "mounting hardware included," then you receive two flimsy picture hooks that can't hold 3kg safely. You're making a trip to the hardware store, wandering the aisles unsure what to buy, possibly buying the wrong anchors for your wall type.
This includes: proper concrete anchors, drywall anchors, D-ring hangers rated for the weight, and a paper hanging template. You're not guessing—you have exactly what you need for your specific wall type.
5. Spiritual art quality that your family approves: Here's the thing marketplace sellers won't tell you: cheap Buddha printing looks cheap. The image is often overly brightened to hide print quality issues. The colors look artificial. When your mother or mother-in-law visits and sees it, there's that subtle pause—it doesn't feel spiritually respectful, it feels like décor that happens to have a Buddha on it.
This canvas: photographic quality with natural shading, dimensional depth, and warm tones that read as respectful spiritual art. The kind of Buddha imagery that your grandmother would approve of for a bedroom or meditation corner.
The ₹1,296 difference is the cost of not replacing your canvas in 8-12 months. It's the cost of Buddha art that still looks meditative and beautiful two years from now instead of faded and warped. It's the cost of installation going smoothly the first time instead of frustrated hardware store trips. It's the cost of spiritual décor that feels intentional, not temporary.
Product photos are professionally styled. Perfect lighting, coordinated furniture (those magenta chairs), flawless blank walls. Your bedroom... isn't that.
Your bedroom probably has: visible electrical switches, an AC vent, maybe your wardrobe against one wall, morning sunlight from an east-facing window, warm LED ceiling lights, a wooden bed with everyday bedding (not hotel-white linens).
Here's what this Buddha canvas will actually look like in your real space:
Above your bed headboard (most common placement):
Centered on the wall, 15-20cm above headboard top
Canvas width (127cm) is slightly wider than your queen bed's headboard (typically 152cm wide, but headboard visual weight is concentrated in the center 120cm)
Effect: Buddha's face becomes the first thing you see when you wake up, and the last thing you see before sleeping—peaceful, grounding presence
With bedside tables (wooden or small cabinets): The canvas doesn't extend over them; it hovers in the center zone, creating balance
In a meditation corner (second most common placement):
Against 8-10 ft wall section in bedroom or living room corner
Hung at eye level when standing (center of canvas at 140-150cm from floor) or slightly higher if you meditate on a cushion on the floor
With meditation cushion, incense holder, small plants below: The 127cm width creates a focal wall; the items below create an altar feeling without being temple-scale
Effect: The corner transforms from "empty space" to "intentional meditation zone"
In morning light (if your bedroom has east-facing windows):
7-9am sunlight makes the warm golds luminous and welcoming
The soft gradient background glows gently—perfect for morning meditation or waking up peacefully
Colors appear at their most serene
In afternoon light (2-5pm, if you have south or west windows):
The golden Buddha intensifies slightly but remains warm-toned
The five-panel dimensional layout creates subtle shadows between panels, adding depth
This is when you can see the canvas texture and print quality most clearly
In evening artificial light (your bedroom's warm LED ceiling light, 3000K):
The warm golds appear richer and more meditative
The gradient background creates a gentle halo effect around Buddha
This is when the canvas looks most integrated with your room's ambiance—calm, intentional, spiritual
Against cream/off-white walls:
Buddha stands out as a clear focal point without harsh contrast
The beige-to-gold gradient background transitions smoothly into cream walls
Looks like the art was chosen specifically for your walls (because the colors genuinely work)
With wooden furniture (teak bed, sheesham side tables, wooden wardrobe):
Natural wood browns + warm golds = cohesive, grounded color palette
The room feels intentional, like someone who values both aesthetics and spirituality lives here
With everyday bedding (not styled white linens):
Whether your bedding is blue, brown, cream, or even patterned, the neutral gradient background makes the Buddha canvas work
The focal point is Buddha's face and the spiritual meaning—not screaming for color coordination
The honest test: Walk into your bedroom after hanging this. Does your eye go to the Buddha in a "that brings peace to this space" way, or in a "that's just there on the wall" way? Quality spiritual art becomes part of your room's energy. It doesn't sit as a separate element—it integrates into the feeling of the space.
This Buddha canvas, with its warm golds, dimensional panels, and meditative presence, becomes a grounding element in your bedroom or meditation corner. Not just décor—a daily reminder of peace, mindfulness, and intention.
We asked people who purchased 5-panel Buddha canvases what surprised them after living with it:
"I was nervous about putting spiritual art in my bedroom because I didn't want it to feel too serious or temple-like, but the warm gold tones made it feel peaceful, not intimidating. My wife actually meditates in front of it now."
— Rajesh, Bangalore (purchased 127cm Buddha meditation canvas for master bedroom)
"Installation took 18 minutes. I'm not handy with tools, but the template made it impossible to mess up. The canvas is still perfectly level eight months later."
— Priya, Mumbai (purchased 5-panel Buddha canvas, hung above bed in rental apartment)
"My mother visited and complimented it immediately. That was the real test—she's particular about spiritual imagery being respectful. She said the Buddha's face looks peaceful and appropriate for home."
— Arun, Pune (purchased for meditation corner in living room)
"We've been through two monsoon seasons. The bedroom gets humid (no AC at night), and there's zero warping or color change. My previous marketplace canvas started rippling after the first monsoon."
— Deepika, Chennai (purchased 127cm Buddha canvas, bedroom faces east with morning sun exposure)
"The five-panel layout gives it more visual interest than a single flat image. Guests always comment on it—they say it looks more expensive than it was."
— Karthik, Hyderabad (purchased for home office meditation break area)
Shipping time:
5-6 days to metro cities (Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune, Kolkata)
6-8 days to tier-2 and tier-3 cities
Tracking details sent within 24 hours of order placement
Packaging:
Triple-layer protection: bubble wrap around canvas + cardboard corner protectors + outer carton
Why this matters: Shipping is rough on large canvas. This packaging is why your Buddha canvas arrives undamaged, with corners intact and canvas unmarked.
Cash on Delivery (COD):
Available across India wherever courier services operate
The delivery person will allow you to inspect the outer carton for major damage before you pay
If the outer box is crushed, torn, or visibly damaged, refuse delivery and contact customer service immediately
Video your unboxing (seriously, do this):
Start recording before you cut the tape
Show all sides of the box, then the unwrapping process
If there's shipping damage (bent frame, torn canvas, broken corners), video proof makes replacement claims instant
Without video, proving shipping damage becomes difficult
Replacement policy:
Full replacement for:
Manufacturing defects (print errors, color inconsistencies, frame defects, canvas not properly stretched)
Shipping damage (bent frames, torn canvas, broken corners, damaged panels)
Replacement ships within 2-3 days of approved claim
What's NOT covered:
Buyer's remorse ("it looks bigger/smaller than I expected" when dimensions were clearly listed)
Subjective color complaints ("the gold looks different on my screen" when it matches the product photo and your screen isn't color-calibrated)
Damage occurring after installation (you dropped it, wall anchor failed due to improper installation, pet/child damage)
Normal wear after 12+ months of use
Color accuracy expectation:
Product photos are shot in natural daylight with calibrated cameras to show true colors
Your phone/laptop screen settings affect how colors appear to you
If your screen is set to "warm" or "cool" color temperature, the canvas will look different than the photo on your specific device
The actual canvas matches properly calibrated displays—which means the warm golds, bronze, and amber you see in the product image are accurate
Cleaning and maintenance:
Dust with a dry microfiber cloth every 2-3 weeks
DO NOT use water, cleaning chemicals, or furniture polish
Just dry dusting—that's it
The moisture-resistant coating means dust sits on the surface and wipes away cleanly instead of embedding in the canvas texture
Moolwan isn't a marketplace reseller sourcing Buddha canvases from random suppliers. We manufacture canvas wall art in-house because we got tired of the inconsistent quality, faded colors, and warped frames we encountered when trying to find spiritual art for our own homes.
Why in-house manufacturing matters for Buddha canvas specifically:
Spiritual imagery requires respectful representation. We don't randomly source Buddha images from stock photo sites and print them on whatever canvas is cheapest that month. Each design is selected for its meditative quality, appropriate symbolism (this meditating Buddha in Abhaya Mudra—blessing and fearlessness pose—is spiritually appropriate for homes), and visual composition that works in Indian bedrooms and meditation spaces.
Our manufacturing process:
Canvas: 340 GSM artist-grade cotton from textile mills in Surat
Inks: Eco-solvent inks from Roland (commercial-grade printing equipment, not desktop printers)
Frames: Sustainably sourced pinewood from Karnataka plantations, kiln-dried in our facility to exactly 12% moisture content for Indian climate stability
Assembly: Each frame is cut, assembled, and corner-braced for structural integrity
Stretching: Canvas stretched using pneumatic tools for even tension (not hand-stapled inconsistently)
Quality inspection:
Every canvas is physically inspected before shipping—not sample-checked, actually inspected. Someone looks at the print quality, checks color consistency across all five panels, verifies frame corners are square, confirms canvas tension is even, tests that D-rings are properly attached.
Why this matters: When you order this Buddha canvas, you know exactly what you're getting. Same canvas weight, same ink quality, same frame construction, every single time. You're not gambling on which supplier a marketplace seller is using this month or whether they'll cut corners to meet a price point.
Designed for Indian homes:
We live in Indian homes. We know your bedroom walls are probably 10-12 feet, your ceilings are 8-10 feet, your furniture is wooden or fabric in browns and beiges, your walls are cream or off-white. Our sizes (127cm—not random international measurements), our color palettes (warm golds that work with Indian interiors), our spiritual imagery selections (appropriate for home, not temple-scale)—everything is designed for the spaces we actually live in.
This Buddha meditation canvas isn't just printed art. It's thoughtfully manufactured spiritual décor designed to bring peace to your bedroom, meditation corner, or living room—and built to maintain that peaceful presence through Indian monsoons, temperature swings, and years of daily viewing.
You've been searching for the right Buddha canvas for your bedroom or meditation space. You've measured your wall. You've considered the size. You've worried about quality, about installation, about whether it will survive monsoons, about whether your family will approve.
You know what you need now:
✓ 127cm fits your 12-foot wall without overwhelming your bedroom
✓ Warm gold tones work with your cream walls and wooden furniture
✓ Meditating Buddha in blessing pose is spiritually appropriate for home
✓ 340 GSM canvas and kiln-dried frames will survive Indian climate
✓ Installation is straightforward and rental-friendly
✓ Quality that your mother/mother-in-law will approve
Your wall—and your meditation practice—have been waiting long enough.
The decision isn't whether to buy Buddha canvas art. You've already decided you want peaceful, spiritual energy in your bedroom or meditation corner. The decision is whether you're ready to stop researching and start waking up to Buddha's peaceful presence every morning.
₹2,496. Five panels of meditative calm. Built to last through monsoons and morning sun. Sized perfectly for Indian bedrooms.
Your meditation corner is waiting.
Product Name: Buddha-tiful 5-Panel Buddha Meditation Canvas Wall Art Painting
Dimensions: 127cm (W) x 76cm (H) x 3.8cm (D)
Weight: 3kg
Design: Golden meditating Buddha in Abhaya Mudra (blessing pose), photographic style
Panel Count: 5 panels (center panel portrait orientation, flanked by 4 progressively smaller panels)
Color Palette: Warm golds, bronze, amber, soft beige gradient background
Canvas Material: 340 GSM cotton canvas with moisture-resistant polymer coating
Frame: 1.5-inch kiln-dried pinewood (12% moisture content)
Inks: Eco-solvent UV-resistant (fade-proof in direct sunlight)
Special Feature: Splash-proof coating for humidity resistance
Installation Hardware Included: Concrete wall anchors, drywall anchors, D-ring hangers, hanging template
Installation Time: 15-20 minutes
Ideal Placement: Above bed headboards, meditation corners, living room spiritual zones, pooja room walls
Room Suitability: Bedrooms, meditation rooms, living rooms, home offices, pooja corners
Wall Size Recommendation: 10-12 foot walls (works with 8-10 foot ceilings)
Furniture Compatibility: Queen/king beds (152-180cm headboards), meditation cushion setups, living room accent walls
Climate Tested: 70-85% humidity (monsoon conditions), 5°C-45°C temperature range, coastal environments
Price: ₹2,496
Shipping: 5-6 days metro cities, 6-8 days tier-2/3 cities
COD Available: Yes, all India
Warranty: Full replacement for manufacturing defects and shipping damage (with unboxing video proof)
Moolwan - Spiritual Wall Art Designed for Indian Homes