A wild field reimagined in paper and precision.
Meadow captures the untamed grace of wildflowers in full bloom—cream and mint petals radiating from copper centers, surrounded by geometric amber leaves and delicate rust-colored florets that dance across the teal canvas. The dimensional construction creates surprising depth, with each bloom appearing to lift off the wall at different heights. This is nature filtered through an origami lens, where every petal is intentional but the composition feels wonderfully unplanned.
The vibe: Wild sophistication. Botanical freedom meets geometric discipline. The kind of pattern that works in both a bohemian loft and a minimalist penthouse, which should be impossible but somehow isn't.
Works beautifully in: Spaces that need energy without chaos—creative studios, eclectic living rooms, modern bedrooms, yoga retreats, cafes with good lighting, boutique retail spaces, or anywhere you want the feeling of "outside" without literal landscape imagery. This is for people who love nature but think most floral wallpaper is trying way too hard to be pretty.
Real talk: Meadow strikes the perfect balance between the collection's minimalist designs (Scattered, Drift) and its more dramatic ones (Layer, Garden). The scattered composition gives your eye room to wander, while those dimensional blooms provide plenty of visual interest. The little rust florets are the unsung heroes here—adding movement and whimsy without tipping into twee territory.
The color palette earns its keep: the cream and mint blooms feel fresh, the amber leaves add warmth, and those copper centers ground everything against the teal backdrop. It's balanced in a way that feels effortless, which means someone (us) sweated the details so you don't have to.
For people who want botanical without the garden party, paper craft enthusiasts with a wild side, and anyone who thinks "meadow" sounds better than "lawn."
Available in 19" wide rolls across three material tiers—because even wildflowers deserve a proper foundation.
Collection note: Part of the Papercut series, where we celebrate the sweet spot between structure and spontaneity, proving dimensional design can feel both planned and free.