Posters for the living room — style tips & gallery ideas
Make your living room sing with posters: simple tips for size, placement and gallery walls that feel lived-in — not staged.
By Mansour

A living room should invite both comfort and personality — posters are the easiest, most flexible way to achieve that. Below are the practical rules we actually use when styling real homes, followed by a few creative ideas and quick links so you can shop or dive deeper.
Start with one anchor piece
If you’re unsure, begin with a single, larger poster above the sofa. A bold, single image often reads calmer and more confident than a cluster of small, competing prints. (Rule of thumb: aim for ~60–70% of the sofa width.)
Browse gallery-ready sets and ready-made wall groups.
Use color to tie the room together
Abstract or photographic posters work best when they pick up one or two tones from your cushions, rugs or curtains. Don’t force a match — look for a gentle echo of color, not a copy.
Mix prints with objects — the lived-in look
A shelf with a print leaning against the wall, a plant, and a small stack of books reads far more personal than a perfectly aligned grid. Let some pieces be framed on the floor for an effortless feel.
Quick gallery-wall recipe (no guesswork)
- 1 large anchor (50–70 cm wide)
- 2 medium companions (30–50 cm)
- 1 small print or framed photo for contrast
Arrange on the floor first, photograph the layout, then hang.

A poster should feel like it’s been chosen, not bought as a “safe” option. Pick something you’d pause to look at — the room will thank you for it.

















