Flowering branches reach across the surface, their forms borrowed from Van Gogh's 1890 Almond Blossom—painted for his newborn nephew in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence. The artist rendered Prunus dulcis with Japanese compositional influence, branches diagonal against flat colour fields.
The pattern preserves Van Gogh's characteristic brushwork: visible strokes defining petals, impasto texture suggested through printing, colour applied with painterly freedom rather than botanical precision. Branches cross the composition at dynamic angles, white or pale pink blossoms clustered along dark limbs. Four colourways reinterpret the original: beige grounds reference Japanese woodblock prints and suit minimal interiors, whilst bolder pink, red, and blue variations intensify chromatic impact. The design balances delicacy—five-petalled blossoms, slender twigs—with structural strength from substantial branches anchoring composition.
Printed in Cornwall with attention to reproducing brushstroke texture and colour layering that distinguishes fine art reproduction from flat graphic interpretation.
Branch adapts across diverse spaces due to its dual character: sophisticated enough for living areas, gentle enough for nurseries. The beige colourway integrates into Japandi aesthetics emphasizing natural materials and restraint. Bolder versions suit feature walls where art reference becomes deliberate focal point. Scale accommodates both intimate and expansive rooms.
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS:
- Width: 75cm per roll
- Length: 7 metres
- Pattern alignment: Straight match
- Repeat: Moderate vertical repeat
- Installation: Butt joint
CARE: Wipe gently with damp cloth to preserve printed texture suggesting original brushwork.
BRING THIS HOME Where Van Gogh's spring meets daily walls, almond blossoms repeat what he painted once for new life.