Hanging florals, ornamental chains, dimensional depth. This is wallpaper that understands gravity is optional.
"Chandelier" is characterized by its suspended composition—florals and decorative elements hang vertically across the wall as if suspended from an invisible ceiling. Golden and orange hibiscus blooms in various states of opening cascade downward, connected by delicate beaded chains and Art Deco ornamental details. The deep forest green background—ranging from emerald to near-black teal—provides dramatic contrast that makes the hanging elements appear to float with genuine dimensionality. Geometric accents and stylized leaf forms punctuate the vertical drops, preventing the composition from reading as literal or representational. The overall effect is less "flower pattern" and more "botanical jewelry displayed against velvet."
The vibe: Opulent restraint. Jewelry box opened in a conservatory. Vertical drama that feels intimate rather than imposing.
Works beautifully in: Bedrooms where you want atmosphere without aggression, dining rooms that can handle moody sophistication, powder rooms with enough wall height to let the pattern breathe, or entryways that prefer intrigue over announcement. This is for people who understand that dark doesn't mean depressing.
Real talk: Chandelier is the moodiest pattern in Eventide—the deep green background dominates the composition, with the hanging florals providing punctuation rather than takeover. This reads dark. Not "charcoal accent wall" dark, but genuinely deep, saturated green that will absorb light rather than reflect it. If your room lacks natural light or you're nervous about dark walls, this will amplify that concern. But in the right space—one with good lighting, adequate square footage, or deliberate moody intent—this pattern creates depth that lighter designs simply cannot achieve. The vertical hanging elements work with standard ceiling heights but truly shine in 9+ foot rooms where the suspension effect has room to register. The ornamental chains and beaded details are subtle from a distance but reward closer inspection.
For dark romantics, moody maximalists, and anyone who believes a bedroom should feel like a sanctuary, not a showroom.
Collection note: Part of the Eventide series, where we capture twilight's refusal to choose between warmth and shadow.
First wall? Our measuring guide takes ten minutes, and the peel-and-stick and paste-the-wall install guides walk you through hanging day.