Moolwan 5-Panel Glasses Bokeh Canvas Wall Art Painting (127x76cm) - Modern Multi-Frame Photography Art
You've measured your wall three times. Maybe four. The tape measure says 360cm, but you're still not confident because online photos never show scale accurately. Every guide says something different, and none account for how Indian living rooms actually work—the sofa pushed against the wall, the window on one side, the pooja shelf in the corner. You keep second-guessing: is 127cm actually right for your space?
Here's the spatial logic that ends the guesswork. This 5-panel glasses canvas measures 127cm across—that's 35% coverage on a standard 12-foot (360cm) Indian living room wall. You'll have roughly 116cm of breathing room on each side. Not cramped. Not floating. Visually anchored.
The image itself is striking in a quiet way: black-framed reading glasses resting on a textured gray surface, with warm orange and cool white bokeh lights creating depth behind. It's modern without being cold. Artistic without demanding attention. The kind of piece that rewards a second look.
Your wall is probably 10 to 14 feet wide. Here's what 127cm means in each scenario:
On a 10-foot (300cm) wall, this canvas covers about 42%—substantial presence, fills the space above a 6-foot sofa confidently. On a 12-foot (360cm) wall, you're at 35% coverage—the sweet spot where art commands attention without overwhelming. On a 14-foot (420cm) wall, coverage drops to 30%—still works, especially if you have furniture anchoring beneath.
The 76cm height matters too. Standard Indian ceilings run 9 to 10 feet. At 76cm tall, this piece sits comfortably in the upper third of your wall without crowding ceiling moldings or competing with fans.
If you've been considering smaller sizes—say 100cm—you'd lose nearly 27cm of visual impact. That's the difference between "nice accent piece" and "intentional focal point."
The dominant palette here is moody and sophisticated: deep blacks, warm amber-orange, cool silvery whites, and muted grays. Against cream or off-white walls (the default in most Indian flats), the black tones create clean contrast without harshness.
Those warm orange bokeh orbs? They'll pick up beautifully under evening LED lighting—the kind most living rooms switch to after 6 PM. Morning natural light will emphasize the cooler gray and white tones, giving the piece a different character throughout the day.
If your sofa is brown or beige (statistically likely), the gray-black palette creates visual separation. The art becomes a distinct element, not something that blends into upholstery tones.
Five panels. Five hooks. Each panel weighs roughly 600 grams—light enough for standard picture hooks without wall plugs or drilling into load-bearing surfaces. The 0.6cm depth means panels sit nearly flush against the wall, minimizing shadow gaps.
Spacing between panels should be 2-3cm for visual cohesion. Total installation width including gaps: approximately 135-140cm. Mark your center point first, work outward, and you'll have this mounted in 20 minutes.
If you're renting and your deposit is ₹50,000 or more, you already know the anxiety of wall damage. Picture hooks leave pinholes that a dab of toothpaste covers during move-out inspection. No landlord drama.
You might have looked at 80cm or 100cm options. Here's the honest trade-off:
An 80cm canvas on a 12-foot wall gives you 22% coverage. It works above a desk or in a narrow hallway, but above a full-size sofa, it risks looking like an afterthought. A 100cm option bumps you to 28%—better, but still on the modest side for a primary living room statement.
At 127cm, you're in the "confident without overwhelming" range. This isn't oversized art that dominates conversation. It's proportional art that looks intentional.
The 5-panel split also changes perception. Five frames spanning 127cm feel more substantial than a single 127cm canvas because your eye tracks across the composition. It reads as curated, not just purchased.
This canvas uses UV-resistant eco-solvent inks on 340 GSM cotton canvas. Colors won't fade noticeably over 5-7 years of normal indoor display, even with afternoon sun exposure common in west-facing Indian living rooms.
The splash-proof coating handles humidity. If you're in Mumbai, Chennai, or Kolkata, monsoon seasons push indoor humidity to 80% or higher. The moisture-resistant finish prevents warping or surface degradation.
What you see in the product image is accurate to the physical piece—no over-saturation or artificial enhancement. The blacks are deep but not absolute. The bokeh has a soft, organic quality. From normal viewing distance (2-3 meters across a living room), fine details in the texture become subtle rather than sharp.
Moolwan stands as India's most reputable Home Décor and Wall Décor brand, transforming houses into emotionally rich homes through thoughtful design. Every piece in the collection tells a story of love, unity, and celebration, resonating deeply with families across the nation. The brand's philosophy centers on the belief that décor is not merely visual but profoundly emotional, strengthening bonds and creating lasting memories. With a perfect blend of modern aesthetics and Indian cultural values, Moolwan serves as a trusted partner in home transformation. From sculptural showpieces to canvas wall art, each product is crafted to bring warmth, meaning, and beauty into everyday living spaces.