Tulipa blooms cluster amongst foliage whilst avian visitors perch and flutter through the composition. Charlotte assembles botanical and ornithological elements into dense pastoral arrangement where garden abundance meets decorative tradition.
The pattern depicts tulips as primary floral element—cup-shaped blooms in varied stages from bud to full flower—accompanied by leaves and stems creating botanical framework. Birds animate the composition: small songbirds perhaps sparrows or finches positioned throughout as if caught mid-movement through flowering branches. Three colourways shift the pattern's character: pink versions maintain traditional feminine floral associations, blue offers cooler sophistication, green emphasizes foliage over bloom. The arrangement reads busy rather than sparse, elements overlapping to create visual density typical of English cottage garden aesthetics. Scale balances recognizable detail with overall pattern cohesion.
Printed in Cornwall with attention to maintaining clarity across the layered botanical and avian elements, colours remaining distinct despite compositional density.
Charlotte suits spaces embracing traditional floral aesthetics or countryside-inspired interiors. Bedrooms, powder rooms, dining areas where garden abundance feels thematically appropriate. The busy composition works best as feature wall application preventing overwhelming sensory impact. Pairs with vintage or cottage-style furnishings, floral textiles, pastoral themes throughout decor. The bird inclusion adds narrative interest beyond static botanical arrangement, suggesting movement and life within the pattern.
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS:
- Width: 75cm per roll
- Length: 7 metres
- Pattern alignment: Straight match
- Repeat: Complex vertical repeat
- Installation: Butt joint
CARE: Wipe gently with damp cloth; the busy floral pattern conceals minor marks within its botanical density.
BRING THIS HOME Where Tulipa meets songbird, walls cultivate gardens that neither wilt nor require weeding through seasons.
Sisuverse Journal | Nest & Nurtured
-
Read more: Botanical Prints: From Pressed Specimens To Contemporary Wallpaper
Botanical Prints: From Pressed Specimens To Contemporary Wallpaper
Botanical illustration began as scientific documentation, artists translating three-dimensional plants into flat images serving both informational and aesthetic purposes. This exploration traces the journey from pressed herbarium specimens and watercolour expeditions to contemporary wallpaper, examining how printing techniques evolved from copperplate engraving through William Morris' screen printing to digital reproduction whilst maintaining essential character: beauty emerging from accuracy rather than imposed upon it.
Read more -
Read more: Woven Ground: The Cultural Geography of Handmade Rugs
Woven Ground: The Cultural Geography of Handmade Rugs
Handwoven rugs carry geography in their fibres. The wool came from specific mountains where specific plants fed specific sheep; the dyes derive from regional botanicals; the patterns preserve cultural memory encoded in visual language. From Persian workshop medallions to Berber mountain abstractions to Scandinavian restraint, each tradition represents centuries of accumulated knowledge, techniques refined through generations. This investigation explores how materials shaped by landscape, methods passed like recipes, and patterns carrying meaning beyond decoration create the ground beneath our feet.
Read more -
Read more: Setting the Table: European Christmas Traditions From Scandinavia to Sicily
Setting the Table: European Christmas Traditions From Scandinavia to Sicily
Geography shapes what we place on Christmas tables and how we place it. From Scandinavian candlelight to Mediterranean abundance, British formality to French patience explore European traditions that transform December gatherings into rituals worth inheriting, adapting, making yours.
Read more