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.
A grid of repeating photographs of the Gateway Arch viewed across the Mississippi River, each frame shifted in tonal palette — warm coral and rust, soft duck-egg blue, dusty lavender, smoky teal, faded butter yellow, and aged sepia. Within each tile the composition holds: the Arch in silhouette, low city skyline at the base, cumulus clouds piled in the upper register, and the river running across the foreground. The repeat reads as a Warhol-adjacent serial print rendered in the tonal language of old hand-tinted postcards.
The painted quality of each tile suggests photographic reproduction — soft halftone dot patterns at close inspection, slightly mottled coloration, and the gentle imperfection of old printing presses. The palette across the grid covers nearly the full spectrum but every tile remains low-saturation, so the pattern reads as harmonious rather than busy. Borders between tiles are clean but not stark, which keeps the overall composition unified.
This paper carries strong civic and architectural character and works in rooms that want a confident regional identity. A gentleman's study, a Midwestern home's entry hall, a hotel bar, a renovated loft kitchen. Pair it with smoked oak, oxidized brass, leather banquette seating, and architectural photography in simple black frames. The variety of tonal palettes means the paper coordinates with nearly any color story in adjoining rooms; the unifying subject keeps it from reading as decorative pop art. Particularly meaningful for St. Louis-connected homes but equally at home in a New York brownstone or a Chicago Lincoln Park townhouse.
Wallpaper pattern is 24" x 24" repeat.