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Botanical Wall Art

Bring the outdoors inside with beautiful, nature-inspired pieces.

Botanical wall art is such a wonderful way to bring a little bit of the outdoors inside. From sweet, quiet vintage illustrations of wildflowers to huge, colorful paintings of lush gardens, adding some plant life to your walls always feels good.

By the numbers

Works
1,203
Mediums
4
Artists
31

1,203 Botanical works

The YourCover Difference

Gallery walls, without the gallery markup.

  • Museum-quality printing

    Archival inks on canvas, acrylic, metal, or fine-art paper — colour-matched to the original.

  • Made to order for you

    Nothing sits in a warehouse. Every piece is printed and finished the day it's ordered.

  • Preview before you buy

    See the exact size, frame, and finish on your wall in real time — no guesswork.

  • Happiness guaranteed

    If a piece doesn't land the way you hoped, we'll make it right — no fuss.

On this collection

Bring the outdoors inside with beautiful, nature-inspired pieces.

Garden by the River
01

The Evolution of Botanical Illustration

Before the invention of the camera, the only way to record the world's flora was through meticulous illustration. The golden age of botanical art, stretching from the 18th to the mid-19th century, was driven by European exploration and the cataloging of new species. Artists like Pierre-Joseph Redouté and Maria Sibylla Merian combined rigorous scientific accuracy with aesthetic composition. Their works, originally published in bound folios, dissected the life cycle of a plant — showing roots, stems, buds, and blooming flowers simultaneously on a single page. Today, these historical plates are digitally restored and reproduced, retaining the slight paper grain and handwritten taxonomic text of the originals. In contemporary botanical art, the focus often shifts from taxonomy to texture, utilizing macro photography or abstract watercolor to isolate specific plant structures, such as the venation of a leaf or the geometry of a seed pod.

02

Contextualizing Botanicals in Modern Rooms

Botanical prints are inherently versatile because they lack the heavy narrative of portraiture or the specific geographic anchor of a landscape. In traditional interiors, a grid of matching vintage plates — often framed in uniform wood or brass — acts as a structured, architectural element, turning a blank dining room wall into a cohesive gallery. In modern spaces, a single, oversized contemporary botanical can serve as a focal point, softening rigid furniture lines with organic shapes. When selecting the medium, consider the style of the artwork. Antique illustrations are best served by matte paper, which mimics the original vellum or rag paper they were drawn on. High-contrast, modern floral photography, however, translates exceptionally well to the sleek surface of acrylic or canvas, where the saturation of the colors can be fully realized.

03

Softening the Edges

Placing organic, natural shapes next to the straight lines of our furniture just feels right. A dark-academia floral arrangement or a bright, happy monstera leaf print acts as a natural anchor, making any room feel a little softer and more inviting. In bedrooms, light, airy botanical sketches add a peaceful rhythm that’s perfect for winding down at the end of the day.

How your print is made

From archive to wall

Digital remastering included

  1. 01

    Source

    Each piece comes from a high-resolution museum or curated archive — the kind of original-quality source you'd otherwise only find at the Met or a specialized print dealer.

  2. 02

    Remaster

    Before we print, every image is digitally cleaned: scan borders trimmed, color profile adjusted to the chosen medium, resolution matched to your selected size. No museum-scan artifacts make it onto your wall.

  3. 03

    Print

    Pigment inks on archival material in our LA studio. Quality-checked, packaged flat or rolled depending on size, shipped ready to hang within 5–7 business days.

Buy with confidence

Sizing & hanging guide

  1. 1

    Measure your wall

    Width and height of the open space, edge to edge.

  2. 2

    Take 2/3 of it

    Art should fill about two-thirds of the available width.

  3. 3

    Match the orientation

    Tall walls take portrait; wide walls take landscape.

  • Hang centre at 57–60" from the floor — eye level.
  • Leave 3–6" between a frame and furniture below it.
  • For a group, treat the cluster as one shape.
  • Bigger reads as more expensive; don't under-size.

FAQ

Frequently asked

Vintage-style botanical prints are either direct reproductions of historical archives (like those from the New York Botanical Garden or Kew Gardens) or contemporary works drawn in the same meticulous, illustrative style. They typically feature off-white or aged backgrounds, taxonomic text in Latin, and distinct, fine linework indicative of copperplate engraving or traditional watercolor.

The most traditional and impactful way to display a series of botanical prints is in a symmetrical grid. Because the subject matter is highly unified, identical frames spaced exactly one to two inches apart create a window-pane effect. This structured arrangement works exceptionally well over a sofa, a long dining console, or lining a hallway.

No. While macro photography of plants is a major segment of modern botanicals, the category also includes abstract painted florals, minimalist line-art leaves, and digital illustrations. Modern botanicals are defined by their composition — often focusing on extreme close-ups, unconventional color palettes, or the isolation of a single plant part against a solid background.

Historical botanical illustrations were scientific tools used by botanists and apothecaries. To be useful, the illustration had to show the entire life cycle and anatomy of the plant on a single page. This means an artist would combine the root system, a budding flower, a full bloom, and the resulting seed pod into one cohesive, though chronologically impossible, composition.

They look amazing with vintage and cottagecore vibes for a super cozy, lived-in feel. If you prefer a more modern look, minimalist botanical line art is a perfect match!

Because they are so grounding and natural, they feel right at home in places where you want to relax or gather with friends, like dining rooms, bedrooms, and sunrooms.

Warm wooden frames, like oak or walnut, highlight the natural vibe beautifully. If you want a crisper look, a simple thin black frame is a foolproof choice.