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Om My Walls! Buddha-tiful 5-Panel Framed Wall Art hanging above a cozy sofa
Om My Walls! Buddha-tiful 5-Panel Framed Wall Art brightening a minimalist bedroom wall
Om My Walls! Buddha-tiful 5-Panel Framed Wall Art hanging above a cozy sofa
Om My Walls! Buddha-tiful 5-Panel Framed Wall Art brightening a minimalist bedroom wall

Om My Walls! Buddha-tiful 5-Panel Framed Wall Art for Instant Zen (150x76cm)

Wave goodbye to boring walls with this Buddha-tiful 5-panel framed Wall Art! Savor vibrant splashes (get it?) on water-proof MDF, all matte-laminated for endless zen. Hooks included—hang in a snap!

₹ 2,496


Brand : INEP

Description

Ready for an instant zen upgrade? This Buddha-tiful framed Wall Art combines 5 splash-proof panels printed on sturdy 6mm MDF, matte-laminated for scratch resistance. Hooks included—transform any space into a serene sanctuary!

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Moolwan 5-Panel Buddha Canvas Wall Art Painting (150x76cm) - Spiritual Meditation Décor

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? 150cm looks perfect in mockups, but your wall has windows on one side and maybe a door frame or that family photo collection. You need to know this works in your specific space, not just styled photos.

Here's what actually matters: your living room wall is probably 12 feet (360cm) wide. This 150cm Buddha canvas covers 42% of that wall—which means 105cm of space on each side. That's not cramped, not floating. It's anchored. When someone sits on your sofa (probably 6-8 feet from the wall), their eye catches the Buddha's serene face at the center panel first, then naturally scans across the flowing composition. The warm bronze and golden sunset tones work because your walls are probably cream or off-white—these aren't jarring contrasts, they're complementary earth tones that Indian homes naturally accommodate.

Why 150cm Works on 12-Foot Walls (and What Happens If You Go Smaller or Bigger)

Let's do the actual math your walls care about. A standard Indian living room has a 12-foot (360cm) wall. This 150cm canvas leaves 210cm remaining—105cm on the left, 105cm on the right.

That 105cm buffer isn't wasted space. It's breathing room. If you go smaller to 127cm, you're down to 35% wall coverage with 116cm on each side—it starts looking like an afterthought, not a focal point. If you jump to a 180cm canvas (which exists but gets expensive), you're at 50% coverage with only 90cm margins—suddenly your windows and door frames compete for attention.

The 150cm sweet spot works because: when your mother-in-law or guests enter, their eyes register "intentional centerpiece" without feeling like the wall is shouting. The 5-panel format (each panel roughly 30cm wide) creates gentle visual rhythm across the 76cm height. That 76cm vertical dimension matters too—most Indian sofas sit at 75-80cm height, so when you're seated, the Buddha's face aligns naturally with your eye level. Not above like temple art, not below like floor décor. Right there.

Why These Colors Actually Work in Indian Living Rooms (Not Just Online Photos)

You've probably noticed: online, every canvas looks good. But in your home with cream walls, brown furniture, and that yellowish tube light your landlord installed? That's the real test.

This Buddha canvas uses warm bronze, copper, and golden sunset tones. Here's why that's not random: Indian living rooms average 70-85% reflected light from cream or off-white walls. Cool colors (grays, blues) can look washed out under warm LED bulbs (2700K-3000K, which most homes use). These warm earth tones absorb and reflect light in the same temperature range—they look richer in evening lighting, not duller.

The bronze Buddha against the golden sky isn't a high-contrast shock. It's a tonal gradient. Morning sunlight through your window will catch the metallic bronze highlights. Evening tube lights or LEDs will warm up the sunset background even more. If you have wooden furniture (coffee table, TV unit), the brown-to-bronze color story is already in your room—this canvas extends it vertically, not fights it.

The splash-proof coating matters here too: Indian monsoon humidity (70-85%) won't warp the canvas or fade those warm tones. The eco-solvent UV-resistant inks hold color even near windows with direct afternoon sun.

Installation Takes 15 Minutes (Even If You're Not Handy)

Five panels. Five nails. That's it. Each panel weighs roughly 600 grams (total 3kg distributed), so a standard wall anchor holds fine—no special hardware. If you're renting and paranoid about your ₹50,000 deposit, use adhesive hooks rated for 1kg each. The 0.6cm depth means panels sit nearly flat against the wall, no awkward jutting.

The 5-panel format gives you layout flexibility: you can mount them with 2-3cm gaps for a flowing, segmented look, or flush together for a unified image. Most people prefer the slight gap—it adds dimension and makes alignment easier (if one panel is 2mm off, the gap camouflages it).

Installation order: start with the center panel (Buddha's face), then work outward to left and right. Use a measuring tape to mark 105cm from each wall edge, then center the middle panel there. The other panels follow the template. Total time: 15-20 minutes if you're careful, 10 minutes if you've done this before.

How This Compares to the 127cm and 180cm Sizes You've Been Considering

You've probably toggled between 127cm, 150cm, and 180cm canvas options. Here's the honest breakdown:

127cm canvas: Covers 35% of a 12-foot wall. Works for bedrooms or smaller rooms (10x12 ft), but in a standard living room, it reads as "decorative accent" rather than "focal art." You'll save ₹300-500, but you'll also wonder if you should've gone bigger. The Buddha's face shrinks to roughly 20cm width—visible, but not commanding.

150cm canvas (this one): Covers 42% of a 12-foot wall. The Buddha's face spans roughly 30cm—when you enter the room, you see it. Not dominating, not lost. Proportional. This is the size where guests ask, "Where did you get that?" instead of not noticing at all. Price: ₹3,996. The 76cm height fits above most sofas (75-80cm tall) without needing excessive wall space.

180cm canvas: Covers 50% of a 12-foot wall. Only 90cm margins left. If your wall is uninterrupted (no windows, doors, switches), this works. But most Indian living rooms have at least one window or door in the 12-foot span. The 180cm canvas starts competing with those architectural elements. Also ₹600-800 more expensive. Only go this big if your wall is truly blank or you're decorating a lobby/hallway.

The 150cm size is the Goldilocks option: big enough to matter, not so big it overpowers. If you're still unsure, measure your wall, then visualize 105cm of open space on each side—does that feel balanced? That's your answer.

What This Will Actually Look Like (Morning Light vs. Evening LED)

Online photos lie. Not intentionally, but they're shot in controlled studio lighting. Your home has morning sunlight, evening tube lights, and that one corner where light never quite reaches. Here's what to expect:

Morning (8 AM - 11 AM): If your living room has east-facing windows, natural sunlight will hit the canvas at an angle. The bronze Buddha will gleam—almost metallic. The golden sunset background will look more amber-yellow than orange. This is when the canvas looks most "alive." Colors appear 10-15% lighter than online photos.

Afternoon (12 PM - 4 PM): Overhead sunlight is harsh. If the canvas is on a south-facing wall, direct sun might wash out details for 2-3 hours. The splash-proof UV-resistant coating prevents fading, but immediate viewing won't be ideal. This is normal for all wall art—it's a viewing distance issue, not a product flaw.

Evening (5 PM - 9 PM): Most Indian homes use warm LED bulbs (2700K-3000K). Under this lighting, the canvas looks richest. The bronze deepens to a burnt sienna, the sunset golds turn more copper-orange. This is likely when guests visit, so this is the lighting that matters most. The canvas will look 5-10% warmer (more orange) than online photos. If you have cool white LEDs (5000K+), the canvas will look slightly more muted—not bad, just less dramatic.

Viewing Distance: From your sofa (6-8 feet away), you see the full composition—Buddha's serene expression, the layered panels, the color flow. Walk up close (2-3 feet), and you'll notice the canvas texture (340 GSM cotton weave) and the eco-solvent ink detail. Both perspectives are intentional. Most wall art is meant to be appreciated from seating distance, not scrutinized from inches away.

If your walls are builder's peach or light yellow (not cream), the warm tones will blend even more. If you have bright white walls (rare in India but possible), the canvas will stand out more boldly—still harmonious, just higher contrast.

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