IMG-LOGO

Cart

Nature's 5-Panel Framed Wall Art That Makes Your Walls Bloom showcasing lush forest imagery on a living room wall
Close-up of Nature's 5-Panel Framed Wall Art That Makes Your Walls Bloom depicting vibrant green foliage details
Nature's 5-Panel Framed Wall Art That Makes Your Walls Bloom showcasing lush forest imagery on a living room wall
Close-up of Nature's 5-Panel Framed Wall Art That Makes Your Walls Bloom depicting vibrant green foliage details

Nature's 5-Panel Framed Wall Art That Makes Your Walls Bloom (127x76cm)

Bring the outdoors in with this Nature's 5-Panel Framed Wall Art that'll make your walls sing! Multi-frame design, splash-proof & ready to hang—it's like a garden party for your living room!

₹ 2,496


Brand : INEP

Description

Elevate any space with this playful multi-panel Wall Art: vibrant nature scenes printed on splash-proof MDF frames. Ready-to-hang hooks make installation a breeze. Your walls will thank you (and so will your guests)!

Key Attributes




Make it Extra Special


Customer reviews

Please login or register to submit your review. Please also note that submiting review is only enable for users who have bought this product


Qty:

Qty:

Moolwan 5-Panel Ocean Sunset Canvas Wall Art Painting (127x76cm) - Multi-Frame Seascape Nature Art

Three weekends of browsing. Probably a dozen saved items. Maybe more tabs open than you'd admit. And you're still here because every time you get close to buying, the same question stops you: will 127cm actually look right above my sofa, or will it seem like it's floating awkwardly? You're not indecisive—you're careful. Because once this is on your living room wall, you'll see it daily. It needs to be right.

This 5-panel ocean sunset captures that specific moment when the sky turns from day to dusk—deep navy blues rolling into the water, golden-orange light breaking through dramatic clouds, and distant islands silhouetted against the horizon. The image spreads across five aligned panels, creating a panoramic effect that draws your eye from left to right, mimicking how you'd actually scan a horizon if you were standing at the shore.

Your walls are probably cream or off-white (most Indian homes are). The navy and deep teal in this piece will create natural contrast without clashing. The warm sunset oranges will pick up any wooden furniture tones you already have—your coffee table, TV unit, or bookshelf. This isn't abstract art that needs to "match" everything. It's a scene that sits comfortably in warm, neutral spaces.

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

Your living room wall is probably around 12 feet (360cm) wide. At 127cm, this artwork covers roughly 35% of that wall space—leaving about 116cm on each side. That's the sweet spot. Too much coverage (50%+) and the art dominates the room. Too little (under 25%) and it looks like an afterthought.

Above a standard 6-8 foot sofa, this creates what designers call "visual anchoring." The artwork extends slightly beyond the sofa's width perception without overwhelming it. If your sofa is pushed against the wall, the 76cm height sits comfortably in the 90-120cm space between sofa backrest and ceiling (assuming standard 9-10ft ceilings).

What happens with smaller sizes? A 100cm piece on a 12ft wall drops to 28% coverage—noticeable, but starts to feel like a placeholder rather than a statement. What happens with larger sizes? Going to 150cm pushes you to 42% coverage, which works if your wall is completely bare, but can feel heavy if you have shelving or windows nearby.

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

In morning light, the navy blues will appear deeper and more saturated. The golden sunset section will glow warmer as natural light hits it directly. By evening, under warm LED lighting (which most Indian homes have), the entire piece shifts slightly warmer—the blues take on a softer, almost teal quality, and the sunset section becomes more amber than gold.

This isn't a concern—it's actually an advantage. Unlike single-tone artwork that looks identical all day, this seascape changes character with your lighting. The deep blues won't look harsh against cream walls because they're balanced by warm tones. If your existing furniture leans brown or beige (wooden coffee tables, fabric sofas), the sunset oranges will echo those tones without competing.

Against builder's peach walls (still common in many flats), the cooler blues provide welcome contrast, making the space feel less monotone.

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

Each of the five panels comes with D-rings pre-attached on the back. You'll need 5 small nails or picture hooks—standard hardware store items. The total weight of 3kg distributes across five hanging points, meaning each panel bears only about 600 grams of load. This is light enough for basic wall plugs, even in older construction.

For rental-deposit safety: small nail holes (under 5mm) typically fall under "fair wear and tear" in most rental agreements. If you're particularly cautious, 3M Command strips rated for 2kg can hold individual panels, though nail mounting is more stable for long-term display.

Installation takes about 15-20 minutes. The key is spacing the panels evenly—roughly 2-3cm gaps between each panel maintains the panoramic continuity without making the separation look accidental.

How This Compares to Single-Panel Ocean Art You've Been Considering

Single-panel ocean prints at this size (127x76cm) exist at lower price points. Here's the honest difference:

Visual impact: A single panel is one image. Five panels create depth perception—your eye travels across the scene rather than taking it in all at once. This makes the artwork feel larger than its actual dimensions.

Wall presence: Five frames create architectural interest. A single frame is just... a frame. The multi-panel approach adds dimension to flat walls without requiring shelving or additional decor.

The marketplace alternative: Yes, you can find ₹800-1,200 canvas prints online. They typically use 180-220 GSM canvas (this uses 340 GSM cotton canvas), thinner frames, and inks that fade within 18-24 months of sun exposure. The splash-proof coating on this piece specifically addresses Indian humidity—important if your living room gets monsoon moisture or if you run a cooler/AC that creates condensation cycles.

Setting Realistic Expectations: What You'll Actually See

From 8-10 feet away (typical sofa-to-wall viewing distance): The five panels merge into a continuous panorama. Panel gaps disappear visually, and the scene reads as one wide horizon.

From 3-4 feet away (walking past): You'll notice brushstroke texture in the printed canvas and see the individual panel boundaries clearly. This is normal and intentional—multi-panel art is meant to be experienced from living distance, not examined up close.

Color accuracy: The deep navy will look slightly different on your wall than on screen (screens emit light; walls reflect it). In person, expect the blues to be about 10-15% less saturated than they appear in product photos. The sunset oranges will be accurate.

What this won't do: This won't make a small room look bigger (no artwork does that). It won't hide wall imperfections behind it. It won't match hot pink or lime green accent walls (if you have those, this piece isn't for you).

What this will do: Give your largest wall a focal point that visitors notice. Provide the "finished room" feeling that empty walls lack. Make your existing brown/beige furniture look intentionally coordinated rather than randomly assembled.

Quick Specifications



Item added to cart

Quick View