Pick your pattern
Browse the collection and find the design that fits your space — filter by style, color, or room. Order a sample to see it in your lighting first.
One sample and one true-to-scale 24″ × 24″ panel — same pattern, same material. See the color, texture, and repeat before you commit to rolls.
Includes 1 Peel & Stick sample and 1 Peel & Stick 24″ × 24″ panel.
Warm bronze-and-honey scarab beetles arrange in formal alternating rows across a soft tan-cream ground, with smaller decorative beetle silhouettes appearing as ghost-print background detail. The hero scarabs alternate between two postures — wings folded and wings spread — with each beetle showing careful natural history detail: visible wing case ridges, fine leg articulation, and the characteristic horned head plate of the Egyptian dung beetle. Wing-spread specimens reveal warm bronze flight wings underneath.
Palette holds to three warm notes: soft tan-cream ground, warm bronze-honey beetle bodies with subtle deep red and dark teal tonal variation, and faint paler ghost-print beetle outlines in the background. The visual logic combines Victorian natural history plate tradition with the formal symmetry of Egyptian decorative art — these are scarabs presented with the gravitas of museum specimens. Scale is heroic; full scarabs occupy substantial real estate with composition built around carefully alternating posture and direction.
A confident choice for libraries, paneled studies, dining rooms, the back walls of statement powder rooms, and dressing rooms in homes with serious natural history or Egyptian decorative interest. Works in restored Federal architecture, English country houses with naturalist heritage, modern art-collector interiors, contemporary Egyptian-revival rooms, and traditional houses that want one wall of unapologetic specimen reference. Pairs with carved walnut, oxblood leather seating, faded oriental rugs, brass picture lights, and warm ivory linen. Particularly handsome in libraries where the formal beetle arrangement reinforces the collector character of bound books and natural-history specimens.