by Volkan Yıldırım
The hardest part of a gallery wall isn’t the hanging. It’s the picking. Most people throw three prints together that they each love individually and end up with a wall that feels random. The trick is curation — the prints have to talk to each other. Below are five combinations we’ve seen work over and over again, each anchored on a different mood.
Three city line-art skyline prints from places you’ve lived in or honeymooned in. We recommend keeping all three on the same colour family for visual coherence:
Frame identically. Hang in a horizontal row at eye level. The single-colour grounds of line art make this combo airtight.
Three national park prints from the Wild Wonders series, arranged as a triptych:
Three WPA-style vintage travel posters, identically framed, evenly spaced over a sofa. Works in cabins, lake houses and city apartments alike.
Three Van Gogh-style starry night tributes from the Starry Night Series:
All three share the swirling indigo-and-gold sky. The wall reads as one continuous story. Perfect over a four-poster bed.
Two Bauhaus geometric prints flanking a Picasso line-art tribute:
Three pieces, tight palette of black/cream + one accent green, identical thin oak frames. Reads as a serious gallery wall.
One large statement print + two smaller satellites from different series:
This combination only works if you commit to telling a single story — in this case, “romantic European living.” Each piece is different in subject and style, but the warm Mediterranean palette ties them together.
Between identically-framed prints in a row: 5–8 cm. Between mixed-size pieces in a salon-style layout: 5–10 cm. Bottom of the lowest frame: 15–20 cm above the sofa back. Centre of the cluster at standing eye level (roughly 145 cm from the floor).
Start your wall with one of our flagship collections: Wild Wonders, City Lines, or Starry Night Series.