When paper architecture meets botanical engineering.
Layer is the Papercut collection's masterclass in dimensional design—oversized teal leaves create a flowing canvas beneath delicate branches bearing cream blooms with rust-orange accents. The depth here is almost absurd; every element casts its own shadow, creating a pattern that shifts and breathes with changing light. This is paper craft that refuses to stay flat.
The vibe: Sculptural serenity. Modern botanical installation captured in two dimensions (barely). The kind of pattern that makes interior designers take photos for their portfolios.
Works beautifully in: Spaces that can handle visual weight—feature walls in living rooms, sophisticated bedrooms, executive offices, upscale wellness centers, hotel lobbies, high-end restaurants, or anywhere you need a pattern that commands presence without shouting. This is for people who understand that "statement wall" should mean something.
Real talk: Layer is aptly named—this is the most dimensionally complex design in the Papercut collection. Those oversized leaves aren't just background; they're active participants creating depth, rhythm, and visual movement. The rust-red branches add warmth and structure, while the scattered small leaves provide scale reference that makes the composition feel both intimate and grand. It's a lot, but it's intentional.
The cream blooms pop against all that teal in a way that feels earned rather than forced. And those little golden accent leaves? They're doing more work than you'd expect, adding just enough warmth to keep the cool palette from feeling cold.
For maximalists who appreciate restraint, paper craft obsessives, and anyone who thinks the word "dimensional" should be taken literally.
Available in 19" wide rolls across three material tiers—because this level of complexity demands proper execution.
Collection note: Part of the Papercut series, where we push dimensional design to its logical conclusion and prove that layering is both a technique and an art form.