Wall Art Size Guide: Every Placement, Every Space

Wall Art Size Guide: Every Placement, Every Space

Choosing the wrong size art is the most common — and most avoidable — decorating mistake. Too small and the piece looks lost, like a PostIt note on a warehouse wall. Too large and it crowds everything around it. The right size makes art feel like it was always meant to be there.

The good news: there are a few simple rules that work for almost every placement, and once you know them you'll never second-guess yourself again. This guide covers every common placement — above the sofa, above the bed, in the hallway, above a fireplace, on a large feature wall, and for a gallery wall — with exact measurements in centimetres.


The rule that covers almost everything: the two-thirds principle

For any art hung above furniture, the piece (or the total width of the arrangement) should span roughly two-thirds of the furniture's width. So a 180cm sofa calls for art around 120cm wide. A 135cm double bed headboard works with art around 90cm wide.

This isn't a rigid law — there's a comfortable range either side — but it's the starting point professional decorators use because it reliably produces proportionate results. When in doubt, measure your furniture, multiply by 0.67, and you have your minimum art width.

The other consistent rule: hang art so the centre of the piece sits at roughly 145-150cm from the floor in a standing room, or 140cm in a living room where you're mainly seated.


Above the sofa

The sofa wall is the most-asked-about placement and for good reason — it's usually the dominant wall in the room and the one your eye goes to when you sit down.

The rule: art should span 60-75% of the sofa width. The bottom of the frame should sit 15-25cm above the top of the sofa back.

Why not wider? Art that extends beyond the sofa edges pulls the eye sideways rather than inward, and makes the arrangement feel unanchored. The furniture should feel like it belongs to the art, not the other way round.

Above the sofa: size guide

Sofa width

Recommended art width

Single piece options

Gallery wall width

150cm (small 2-seat)

90-110cm

80x60cm, 90x60cm

90-110cm total

180cm (standard 3-seat)

110-130cm

100x70cm, 120x80cm

110-130cm total

200cm (large 3-seat)

120-150cm

120x80cm, 140x100cm

120-150cm total

220cm+ (XL or corner)

140-165cm

140x100cm or two prints

140-165cm total

250cm+ (large sectional)

160-190cm

Two or three prints

160-190cm total


Single piece vs gallery wall above the sofa: a single large piece makes more of a statement and works well in minimal or modern interiors. A gallery wall (two, three or more prints) gives you more flexibility with art you already own and suits more eclectic spaces. For either, the total width rule is the same. Browse art prints or canvas art to find your anchor piece.

Hanging height above sofa: bottom of frame 15-25cm above the sofa back. If you go higher, the art starts to float — it loses its connection to the furniture. If you're shorter than average, err toward 15cm. Taller ceilings can take 20-25cm.



Above the bed

The principle is the same as the sofa, but bedrooms have their own logic — the art needs to feel calm and connected, not imposing.

The rule: art should span 60-75% of the headboard width (or the bed width if you have no headboard). Hang so the bottom of the frame sits 15-20cm above the top of the headboard, or 45-60cm above the mattress if you have no headboard.

Above the bed: size guide by UK bed size

Bed size

Bed/headboard width

Recommended art width

Portrait or landscape?

Single

90cm

55-70cm

Either — portrait reads well

Small double

120cm

75-90cm

Landscape or square

Double

135cm

85-100cm

Landscape or square

King

150cm

95-115cm

Landscape preferred

Super king

180cm

110-135cm

Landscape or two prints side by side


Portrait vs landscape above a bed: landscape orientations tend to feel calmer and more horizontal — which suits a bedroom. Portrait prints work well for single beds or for a more gallery-feel arrangement. Avoid anything too vertical and imposing directly above where your head rests — it can feel heavy.

Two prints side by side above a super king: very effective, gives you more art for a similar width, and the gap between them (keep it 5-8cm) reads as a natural break. Choose prints with a shared colour palette rather than identical subject matter for the most considered look. See framed art if you want something ready to hang the moment it arrives.

Fy! Art buying guide - above bed art sizes

 


In the hallway

Hallways are where most people undersize art most drastically — and where getting it right makes an instant impression on everyone who enters.

The rule: in a narrow hallway (under 100cm wide), keep art width to 50-60% of the wall width. In wider hallways, 60-70%. Portrait orientations generally work better than landscape in narrow spaces because they follow the vertical nature of the corridor.

Hallway: size guide

Hallway width

Recommended art width

Best orientation

Notes

Under 80cm

40-50cm

Portrait

Single prints or slim linear row

80-100cm

50-60cm

Portrait or square

2-3 prints work well

100-120cm

60-80cm

Portrait or landscape

Gallery wall possible

120cm+

70-90cm

Any

Gallery wall or statement piece


Staircase walls: follow the rake of the stairs with your arrangement — a diagonal line of prints that steps up with the staircase. Keep gaps consistent (8-12cm) and maintain the same visual centre height (145cm perpendicular to the stair surface, not the floor).

Long hallways: a series of three identically sized prints, evenly spaced, is one of the most effective hallway treatments. It draws the eye down the corridor and makes the space feel longer and more deliberate. Canvas prints work particularly well here as they don't need glass and are more forgiving in fluctuating temperatures.



Above a fireplace

Fireplaces are natural focal points and the mantelpiece creates a ready-made shelf that the art needs to relate to.

The rule: art should be no wider than the fireplace surround (including the mantelpiece), and ideally 80-90% of it. Height matters here too — in a room with standard 240cm ceilings, a portrait print 80-100cm tall above a mantelpiece tends to fill the space without fighting the ceiling.

Above the fireplace: size guide

Fireplace surround width

Recommended art width

Height guidance

90cm (small)

70-80cm

60-80cm tall

120cm (standard)

95-110cm

80-100cm tall

150cm (large)

120-135cm

90-110cm tall

180cm+ (grand)

140-160cm

100-120cm tall, or two prints


How high above the mantelpiece: the bottom of the frame should sit 10-15cm above the mantelpiece shelf. Much higher and it floats. Lower and it risks touching anything displayed on the shelf.


Large feature walls and empty walls

An empty wall without furniture in front of it is harder to size because there's no furniture to use as a reference. The most common mistake here is going too small — a 50x70cm print on a 3-metre wall looks like a stamp.

The rule for empty walls: the art (or arrangement) should fill 40-60% of the wall width, and the visual centre should sit at 145-150cm from the floor.

Large wall: size reference

Wall width

Minimum art/arrangement width

Recommended size

150cm

70cm

80-100cm single, or 2-print set

200cm

90cm

100-140cm single, or 3-print gallery

250cm

110cm

120-160cm, or gallery wall

300cm+

140cm

Large statement piece or full gallery wall


Viewing distance matters: the further away you'll stand from the art, the larger it needs to be. A rough guide: minimum art height (in cm) should be roughly equal to the viewing distance (in metres) multiplied by 30. So if you'll typically view it from 3 metres away, the piece should be at least 90cm tall.


Standard UK print sizes and where they work best

Most art prints on Fy! come in standard sizes. Knowing which size works where saves you from buying something and then realising it's not quite right.

Print size

Dimensions

Works best

A4

21 x 29.7cm

Shelf styling, small bathroom, grouped in a set

A3

29.7 x 42cm

Desk areas, small gallery wall filler, pair above a bedside

50 x 70cm

50 x 70cm

Single above a single bed, hallway statement, small living room accent

A1

59.4 x 84.1cm

Above a double bed, medium gallery wall anchor, dining room

70 x 100cm

70 x 100cm

Above a king bed, large living room accent

100 x 70cm

100 x 70cm

Above a 3-seater sofa (landscape), feature wall

120 x 80cm

120 x 80cm

Above a large sofa, bedroom statement

 


Quick-reference: the rules in one place

Placement

Art width rule

Bottom of frame height

Orientation

Above sofa

60-75% of sofa width

15-25cm above sofa back

Landscape preferred

Above bed

60-75% of headboard width

15-20cm above headboard

Landscape or square

Above fireplace

80-90% of surround width

10-15cm above mantelpiece

Portrait or landscape

Hallway

50-70% of wall width

Centre at 145-150cm from floor

Portrait preferred

Empty wall

40-60% of wall width

Centre at 145-150cm from floor

Any

Gallery wall

75-85% of furniture below

Centre at 140-145cm from floor

Mix




Not sure where to start?

If you know your wall dimensions but aren't sure which prints to put there, Fy!'s AI Gallery Wall Designer lets you plug in your measurements and see arrangements built around them — with art from independent artists, pre-framed and ready to hang.

Or if you want the sizing already sorted for you, 2-print and 3-print gallery wall sets are curated pairs and trios designed to hang together, sized to work above a standard sofa or bed.


Frequently asked questions

What size art print should I get for above my sofa? For a standard 3-seater sofa (around 180cm wide), aim for art that's 110-130cm wide. That's roughly two-thirds of the sofa width. A single 120x80cm print or a pair of 50x70cm prints side by side both work well.

How big should wall art be above a bed? The art should span 60-75% of the headboard width. For a UK double bed (135cm wide) that means art around 85-100cm wide. For a super king (180cm), aim for 110-135cm — either a single landscape piece or two prints hung side by side.

What is the two-thirds rule for wall art? The two-thirds rule says that art hung above a piece of furniture should span roughly two-thirds of that furniture's width. It's the most reliable starting point for sizing art proportionately to a room. Multiply your furniture width by 0.67 for the minimum, and 0.75 for the upper end of the ideal range.

How high should you hang wall art? The centre of the piece should sit at around 145-150cm from the floor in a room where you mainly stand, or 140cm in a living room where you mainly sit. Above furniture, the bottom of the frame should sit 15-25cm above the piece of furniture beneath it.

What size art is good for a hallway? In a narrow hallway (under 100cm wide), keep art to 50-60% of the wall width. Portrait orientations work best in corridors as they follow the vertical nature of the space. A single 50x70cm or A1 print tends to work well in most hallways.

Can wall art be too big? Yes, but it's far less common than going too small. Art that extends beyond the edges of the furniture below it, or that crowds the ceiling, can feel overpowering. The main risk of going too large is above a fireplace with a low mantelpiece, or in a room with low ceilings.

 

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