Art that feels like a painting.
Heavyweight cotton, archival inks, optional floating frame — a new way to hang the art you love.
Our Bestsellers
Loved and trusted — favourites chosen by our customers
Botanical Prints
From intricate leaves to blooming flowers, botanical prints have decorated walls for centuries — and for good reason. They're calm without being boring, detailed without being loud. A natural fit for any room.
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We started at the Berlin markets. Now we ship art to homes across Europe.
We started with a table and a handful of prints. Curious, a little naive, and completely obsessed with finding art worth hanging. Every piece we sell, we're proud to put our name on.
Our story →What our customers say
“Beautiful quality and super-fast delivery. Absolutely love it!”
“The print completely transformed our living room. Perfect size and stunning colours.”
“Already on my second order — the quality and service are simply unbeatable.”
New Modern Art Prints
Every month a new curated selection
We support Artists
We work with a select group of artists to offer unique pieces. By providing a platform, fair royalties and a supportive relationship with each artist, we’ve been able to create a diverse and authentic collection of images.
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From the blog
Wassily Kandinsky: A Collector's Guide to Abstract Art's First Theorist
The law professor who became a painter, the three career phases every collector should know, and why Bauhaus-era Kandinsky is the most collected abstract work of the twentieth century.
Émile-Allain Séguy: A Collector's Guide to the Master of Pochoir
The French designer who bridged Art Nouveau and Art Deco — eleven portfolios, the hand-stencilled pochoir technique that modern printing still can't fully reproduce, and why Séguy's jewel-toned plates sit in museums from the Met to Cooper Hewitt.
Hilma af Klint: A Collector's Guide to the Painter Who Predated Kandinsky
The Swedish painter who produced fully abstract work in 1906, left instructions to hide her most important series for twenty years after her death, and became the most-visited exhibition in Guggenheim history in 2018.