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Bedroom Wallpaper in Real Homes — Our Customers' Transformations

Bedroom Wallpaper in Real Homes — Our Customers' Transformations

The bedroom is where wallpaper earns its keep. Not because it is the most visible room — guests rarely see it — but because it is the room where you spend the most time with your eyes open and unfocused. Lying in bed, waking up, reading at night, scrolling your phone in the morning. The wall behind the headboard is the surface you see more than any other in your house. If that wall has depth, texture, and pattern, it changes how the room feels at every hour of the day.

These are real bedrooms from our customers. Not styled by a photographer with a van full of props — styled by the people who sleep in them. What makes them worth studying is the range: tropical botanicals, birch forests, hand-drawn florals, and moody atmospheric murals. Different patterns, different palettes, but the same fundamental decision — to give the most personal room in the house a wall worth looking at.

Real customer bedroom with tropical palm leaf wallpaper in warm beige and cream, wooden bed frame with white bedding and striped cushions Real customer bedroom with botanical illustration wallpaper in soft blue-grey, rattan headboard, candles, navy and burgundy cushions Real customer bedroom with birch tree forest wallpaper in grey and cream, minimalist Scandinavian styling

Why the Bedroom Wall Matters Most

In interior design, the wall behind the bed is called the anchor wall. It is the first thing you see when you walk into the room, the last thing you see before you close your eyes, and the surface that frames the largest piece of furniture in the space. Wallpaper on this wall does something paint cannot: it creates a headboard effect that extends the full width and height of the wall, giving the bed a visual weight and presence that makes the room feel finished.

The principle is focal point theory. Every room needs one surface that draws the eye and tells you where the centre of the space is. In a bedroom, the bed is that centre. The wall behind it is the frame. When you wallpaper that wall, the frame becomes part of the composition rather than a blank background. The bed, the bedside tables, the lamps — they all feel more intentional when they are sitting in front of a wall that has been designed.

The Tropical Retreat

Bedroom with muted tropical palm leaf wallpaper in warm beige on cream, dark timber bed with white linen and woven striped cushions

Large-scale palm fronds in warm beige and tan on cream — covering the full wall behind a dark timber bed with clean lines. This customer has committed to the pattern on every wall, not just the bed wall, and it works because the colours are so restrained. The monochromatic earth tones mean the pattern adds texture and movement without overwhelming. White bedding, striped natural-fibre cushions, a glowing timber sphere lamp on the nightstand. Every element is organic and warm. The room feels like a resort, but the materials are honest — timber, linen, natural fibre. No gold, no glass, no high-shine surfaces. That consistency is what makes the room feel considered.

The Botanical Atmosphere

Bedroom with large-scale botanical illustration wallpaper in soft blue-grey with peachy undertones, rattan headboard, layered candles

A large-scale botanical illustration in soft blue-grey with hints of peachy pink at the base — palm fronds, ornamental grasses, flowering stems rendered in a hand-drawn style. This customer has layered the room with intention: a woven rattan headboard adds a second texture against the wallpaper, chunky knit throw adds a third, navy and burgundy cushions introduce deeper tones. Multiple amber candles create warm light that plays against the cool wallpaper. The contrast between cool walls and warm light is one of the most effective techniques in bedroom design — it gives the room energy during the day and intimacy at night.

The Birch Forest

Bedroom with birch tree forest wallpaper showing white trunks and bare branches in grey on cream, Scandinavian minimalist styling

Birch trees in grey on cream — bare white trunks with characteristic horizontal lenticels, fine branches reaching upward. This is a wallpaper for someone who wants nature in their bedroom without colour. The monochromatic palette is pure Scandinavian restraint: grey, cream, white. No accent colours needed. The trees create vertical rhythm that draws the eye upward, which makes the ceiling feel higher than it is. In a room with standard eight-foot ceilings, that vertical movement is valuable. This customer has kept the furniture simple — bookshelves, a white lamp, clean blinds — letting the forest do the talking.

Real customer bedroom with wallpaper behind bed Real customer bedroom wallpaper installation
Real customer bedroom with wallpaper feature wall Real customer bedroom wallpaper behind headboard Real customer bedroom with botanical wallpaper
Real customer bedroom wallpaper installation Real customer bedroom with feature wall wallpaper
Real customer bedroom wallpaper styling

What These Bedrooms Teach Us

Eleven different bedrooms, eleven different patterns, and the same principles appearing in every one:

  • The bed wall is always the right wall. Every customer here wallpapered the wall behind the headboard. It is the natural focal point, it is the wall with the fewest interruptions (no doors, usually no windows), and it is the wall you see from the doorway. There is a reason designers call it the anchor wall.
  • Muted tones help you sleep. Not one of these bedrooms uses a bold, saturated wallpaper. Warm beige, soft grey, dusty blue, cream — these are colours that recede rather than advance, which is exactly what you want in a room designed for rest. Save the bold patterns for the rooms where you want energy.
  • Wallpaper replaces art. Several of these bedrooms have no art above the bed. They do not need it. The wallpaper is the art. A patterned wall behind the headboard gives you the visual interest that a framed print would, but at the scale of the entire wall rather than a single frame. It is more immersive and less cluttered.
  • Layer textures, not patterns. These customers pair their patterned wallpaper with textured bedding — knit throws, linen sheets, woven cushions, rattan headboards. Pattern on the wall, texture on the bed. The two elements complement without competing.

Getting Started

All wallpaper is manufactured to your wall measurements — panels numbered in sequence. For bedrooms, any of our three substrates work: Peel and Stick if you rent or like to change, Paste the Wall Smooth for a permanent matte finish, or Paste the Wall Linen for added woven texture that catches light differently through the day.

Order a $4.99 sample (48cm x 40cm) and lean it against your headboard wall at different times of day. Morning light and evening light change everything — and the bedroom is the room where you experience both. Every design can be colour-customised at no extra cost.

Browse our full wallpaper collection, start with our wallpaper guide, or see more real rooms in our journal.

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