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Groovy Splash 5-Panel Vinyl Abstract Framed Wall Art in vibrant multicolour on a modern living room wall
Close-up of Groovy Splash abstract panels showing the vinyl texture and framed details
Groovy Splash 5-Panel Vinyl Abstract Framed Wall Art in vibrant multicolour on a modern living room wall
Close-up of Groovy Splash abstract panels showing the vinyl texture and framed details

Groovy Splash: 5-Panel Vinyl Abstract Framed Wall Art That’ll Make Your Walls Boogie

Get ready to groove with this 5-panel vinyl abstract framed Wall Art that adds a pop of splashy color and parties on your wall—no cleanup required!

₹ 2,496


Brand : INEP

Description

This vinyl abstract framed Wall Art turns dull walls into a lively gallery. With five splash-resistant panels framed on sturdy 6mm MDF, it’s a vibrant, easy-clean statement piece for any room.

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Moolwan 5-Panel Rain on Glass Canvas Wall Art Painting (127x76cm) - Atmospheric Window Scene

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 these mockups, but your wall has windows on one side, maybe a bookshelf nearby, and that brown sofa taking up visual space below. You need to know this works in your specific space, not just styled photos.

That's exactly what this page addresses—not just showing you the art, but helping you picture it on your wall with confidence. This 5-panel raindrop canvas captures a quiet, atmospheric moment: water droplets streaming down glass, soft green foliage blurred in the background, morning light filtering through. The color palette runs from deep teal at the edges through soft sage green in the center, with subtle blue-gray undertones. It's calming without being cold, visual without being loud.

The Visual Math: How 127cm Fits 12ft Walls in Indian Homes

Your living room wall is probably around 12 feet (360cm) wide. This canvas spans 127cm—that's 35% of your wall width. What does that actually mean?

It means you'll have roughly 116cm of empty wall on each side. On a cream or off-white wall (the default in most Indian homes), this creates visual breathing room. The art becomes a focal point without overwhelming the space. If you're centering it above an 8-foot sofa, the art fits well within the sofa's visual frame, creating that intentional "gallery wall" proportion interior designers recommend.

Compare this to a 90cm canvas: that's only 25% coverage on the same wall—often looks like you're still waiting to add something. A 150cm piece pushes to 42%, which can feel crowded if you have windows or shelving nearby. At 127cm, you're in that middle zone where the art holds its own but doesn't fight for attention.

The height matters too. At 76cm tall, this sits comfortably in the typical 8-10 foot ceiling homes across India. Hang it with the center at eye level (roughly 150cm from floor), and you'll have clear space above and below—no awkward ceiling crowding, no collision with furniture tops.

What These Colors Will Actually Look Like (Morning vs. Evening Light)

Here's what most product pages won't tell you: the teals and greens in this canvas will shift throughout the day.

In morning natural light (the soft, diffused kind that comes through north-facing windows), the green tones dominate. The foliage blur behind the raindrops becomes more visible, and the overall mood is fresh, almost like looking out during monsoon. The deep teal at the panel edges reads as a rich, grounded blue-green.

Under evening LED lighting (the warm white 3000K bulbs common in Indian homes), the green pulls slightly warmer. The blue-gray undertones become more prominent, and the whole piece feels more contemplative—like an evening rain you're watching from inside. The purple-mauve hints at the bottom panels become slightly more visible.

Against cream walls: the teal creates pleasant contrast without jarring. Against off-white: the greens feel more harmonious, almost extended. Against builder's peach (that light terracotta common in older flats): the blue undertones provide cooling balance.

With brown or beige sofas—the most common in Indian living rooms—the green-teal palette creates that nature-meets-warmth combination that feels cohesive without matching too literally.

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

Five panels sound complicated, but installation is straightforward—15-20 minutes if you've hung a picture frame before.

Each panel comes with pre-attached D-rings on the back. You'll need five small nails or picture hooks. The total weight is 3kg spread across five panels, so each panel carries roughly 600 grams—light enough that small nails work fine without wall anchors in most plaster walls.

Spacing matters: keep 2-3cm gaps between panels to maintain that segmented look without the panels appearing disconnected. Start with the center panel, align it at eye level, then work outward. A measuring tape and a pencil for light marks are all you need.

For rental apartments: small nail holes are typically covered under normal wear and tear. If your landlord is strict, Command strips (the large picture-hanging variety, 3kg capacity) work for individual panels. The vinyl canvas and pinewood frame are light enough for adhesive mounting, though nails give more permanent security.

The splash-resistant vinyl coating means you can hang this in hallways where humidity fluctuates, or even in kitchens away from direct heat. Wipe with a dry cloth for dust; damp cloth occasionally for deeper cleaning.

How This Compares to Smaller and Larger Sizes You've Been Considering

You've probably been toggling between size options. Here's the honest breakdown:

90cm vs. 127cm: A 90cm canvas on a 12ft wall gives you 25% coverage. It works above a console table or in a smaller bedroom, but in a standard living room, it often feels like placeholder art—nice, but not substantial. You might find yourself adding side pieces later, which creates coordination headaches.

127cm vs. 150cm: A 150cm piece is 42% of a 12ft wall. If your wall is uninterrupted (no windows, no shelving), this can work beautifully—more immersive, more statement-making. But if you have typical Indian flat layouts with windows cutting into wall space, 150cm starts competing for visual real estate. At 127cm, you're choosing versatility: substantial enough to anchor the room, compact enough to work with existing elements.

Single panel vs. 5-panel: Single-panel canvas art at this size often looks like a poster that's trying too hard. The 5-panel format adds depth through segmentation—your eye moves across panels, creating a sense of space that flat single pieces don't achieve. For atmospheric subjects like raindrops on glass, the panel breaks actually enhance the viewing experience.

Setting Realistic Expectations: Colors, Lighting, and Your Space

What this canvas will do: provide a calming focal point that suggests rain, nature, and quiet moments. The blurred greenery and water droplets create depth without demanding attention. Guests will likely comment on the "nice, peaceful feeling" rather than the art itself—it enhances atmosphere rather than competing with it.

What it won't do: transform a cluttered room or fix fundamental layout issues. If your wall has electrical switch plates, AC units, or existing fixtures in awkward positions, measure carefully. The 127x76cm footprint needs clear wall space to read as intentional.

Color accuracy: the teals and greens you see on screen will appear slightly different in your home due to lighting variables. Expect subtle shifts—not dramatic differences. If your walls are cream or off-white and your lighting is standard warm-white LED, you'll see something close to these photos. Heavily yellow-tinted lighting will push the greens warmer; cool white lighting will emphasize the blue-gray tones.

Viewing distance: optimal appreciation happens from 2-3 meters. From across a 12x14ft living room, you'll see the full atmospheric effect. Up close, you'll notice print texture and panel edges—this is normal for canvas art and part of the medium's character.

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