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Picture-Perfect Party: Framed Photography Multi-Frame Wall Art showing five panels hung on a modern living room wall
Close-up of Picture-Perfect Party: Framed Photography Multi-Frame Wall Art panels with vivid colors
Picture-Perfect Party: Framed Photography Multi-Frame Wall Art showing five panels hung on a modern living room wall
Close-up of Picture-Perfect Party: Framed Photography Multi-Frame Wall Art panels with vivid colors

Picture-Perfect Party: Framed Photography Multi-Frame Wall Art That'll Make Your Walls Sing

Give your walls a high-five with this framed photography multi-frame wall art! Five splash-proof panels are ready to hang and jazz up any space in seconds.

₹ 2,496


Brand : INEP

Description

Five sleek panels of framed photography bring your walls to life. Printed on splash-resistant MDF and finished with matte lamination, this multi-frame wall art is as durable as it is dazzling. Hooks included!

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Moolwan 5-Panel Gaming Character Canvas Wall Art Painting (127x76cm) - Multi-Frame Pop Culture Photography

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 probably has a window on one side, a doorway nearby, or furniture breaking up the space. You need to know this works in your specific space, not just styled photos.

Here's what the numbers actually mean for your wall. If you have a typical 12-foot (360cm) living room wall—common in most 2BHK and 3BHK Indian apartments—this 127cm canvas covers roughly 35% of the horizontal space. That leaves about 116cm of breathing room on each side. Enough to feel substantial without overwhelming the wall or making the room feel cramped.

The five-panel split adds visual interest without requiring precision alignment. Each panel flows into the next, creating a continuous image that draws the eye across the entire piece. The gaming characters in their signature green and red stand in victorious poses against a soft bokeh green background—playful, nostalgic, and surprisingly versatile in home settings.

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

Let's break down what 127cm actually means for your space. Your living room wall is probably 10-14 feet wide. Here's how this canvas plays out:

On a 10ft (300cm) wall: 127cm covers 42% of the width. That's substantial—the canvas becomes the clear focal point, with 86cm on each side. Works well, but feels bold.

On a 12ft (360cm) wall: 127cm covers 35% of the width. This is the sweet spot for most Indian living rooms. The canvas commands attention without dominating, leaving 116cm breathing space on each side for wall sconces, smaller frames, or clean negative space.

On a 14ft (420cm) wall: 127cm covers 30% of the width. Still proportional, but you might want to add complementary smaller pieces or floating shelves on either side to fill the visual gap.

At 76cm height, this sits comfortably above a standard 6-8 foot sofa with the recommended 15-20cm gap between sofa back and canvas bottom. Your 9-10ft ceiling height means approximately 150-180cm of wall space above the sofa—this canvas fills roughly half of that, maintaining balance.

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

The vibrant greens and reds in this piece behave differently depending on your wall color and lighting. Against cream walls—the most common in Indian homes—the green background softens while the red and green character details pop with clarity. The blue overalls provide grounding contrast.

Morning natural light: The green background appears fresh and bright, the red cap and shirt look vivid. The bokeh effect in the background catches light beautifully.

Evening LED light (warm white): Colors mellow slightly. The greens become richer, the reds deepen. The overall effect is cozy rather than electric.

Against off-white or light yellow walls, expect similar behavior. Against beige or darker walls, the lighter green background creates pleasant contrast, preventing the piece from disappearing into the wall.

The glossy photography finish means some light reflection at certain angles. Position away from direct window glare or consider viewing angles from your primary seating.

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

Five panels might sound complicated, but installation is straightforward. Each panel comes with D-ring hangers pre-attached. You'll need five nail points—standard wall nails work fine on Indian concrete/brick walls.

The key to even spacing: Start with the center panel at eye level (approximately 145-150cm from floor to center). Space each adjacent panel 2-3cm apart. A simple trick—cut cardboard spacers to ensure consistent gaps.

For rental apartments where you're worried about your ₹50,000 deposit: The five nail holes are small and easily filled with wall putty (₹50 at any hardware store) when you move out. Total wall contact is minimal—just five small points rather than one large mounting bracket.

Installation time: 20-25 minutes if you measure carefully. The lightweight 3kg total weight (distributed across five panels) means standard wall nails hold securely without heavy-duty anchors.

How This Compares to Smaller Sizes You've Been Considering

You've probably looked at 90cm and 100cm options. Here's the honest difference:

90cm on a 12ft wall: Covers 25% of wall width. Can look proportionally small, especially above a full-sized sofa. Works in smaller rooms or as part of a gallery arrangement.

100cm on a 12ft wall: Covers 28% of wall width. Adequate but not commanding. The multi-panel effect loses some impact at this scale.

127cm on a 12ft wall: Covers 35% of wall width. The panels have room to breathe, the characters are life-size enough to be recognizable from across the room, and the piece anchors the wall without overwhelming it.

Going larger (150cm+): Works on 14ft+ walls, but in standard Indian living rooms, can feel imposing and reduce perceived room size.

For gaming rooms, kids' bedrooms, or entertainment spaces, 127cm hits the sweet spot—large enough to make a statement, scaled appropriately for residential spaces.

Setting Realistic Expectations: Colors, Lighting, and Your Space

What you'll notice immediately: The five-panel split creates gallery-style presentation. The photography captures texture and dimension—the characters look almost three-dimensional.

What takes a few days to appreciate: How the piece changes character throughout the day with different lighting. How visitors' eyes are drawn to it. How it becomes a conversation piece for anyone who recognizes the iconic gaming characters.

What it won't do: This is printed photography on canvas, not backlit or textured in a way that changes with viewing angle. The colors are accurate to what you see online, printed with UV-resistant eco-solvent inks on 340 GSM cotton canvas.

Viewing distance matters: From 2-3 meters (typical sofa-to-wall distance), you see the complete composition. From closer, you can appreciate the photography detail and canvas texture. The piece works at both distances.

The pinewood frame (1.5" depth) gives the panels presence—they project slightly from the wall rather than lying flat, creating subtle shadow lines that add dimension.

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