Climbing toward something beautiful, one folded leaf at a time.
Vine captures growth in its most elegant form—delicate branching stems trace upward paths across a teal canvas, dotted with geometric amber and coral leaves that cluster and scatter with organic logic. Cream water lilies with amber centers serve as anchoring moments among the climbing foliage. This is botanical architecture at its finest: structured enough to feel intentional, loose enough to feel alive.
The vibe: Upward momentum with restraint. Autumn in paper form. The kind of pattern that feels like it's going somewhere without being in a hurry to get there.
Works beautifully in: Spaces that benefit from vertical movement—rooms with high ceilings, narrow accent walls, entryways, stairwells, modern offices, creative studios, or anywhere you want to draw the eye upward without literal stripes. This is for people who understand that good design can suggest direction without pointing arrows.
Real talk: Vine is all about movement and balance. Those climbing stems create strong vertical lines that make walls feel taller, while the clustered leaves add visual weight at strategic points. The scattered composition keeps it from feeling too rigid, and those occasional blooms? They're perfectly placed rewards for following the vines upward. It's thoughtful without being overthought.
The geometric leaves add a modern edge that keeps this from feeling too traditional, while the dimensional quality creates shadows that emphasize the climbing motion. The warm amber and coral against cool teal creates just enough contrast to feel energizing without being aggressive.
For people who appreciate growth (literal and metaphorical), vertical space optimizers, and anyone who thinks botanical design should have a sense of direction.
Available in 19" wide rolls across three material tiers—because upward momentum deserves a solid foundation.
Collection note: Part of the Papercut series, where we celebrate movement, prove that vines don't need to be literal, and show that sometimes the journey up the wall is the whole point.