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What decorations are on your walls?

And what do you recommend to hang on walls, for decorative purposes, besides family photos?

Mine are blank and barren, an empty canvas for the maniacal decorator in me, after carefully negotiated with the family.

87 comments
  • Flyers & silkscreened posters by friends.

    • What are you doing with these old writing machine/PCs?

      • I collect old computers (mostly high-end 90s servers: Sun & SGI, but also some older things like that decwriter & tektronics graphics terminal) and I help run a computer museum, so I frequently have things on loan from the museum - either stuff I'm working on, or photographing.

        I had this on loan from the museum a few years ago to get V7 Unix (circa 1979) running on it:

  • I have a signed photos of Patrick Stewart and William Shatner. Nothing else lol, the rest of my walls are essentially bare. But, I’ve never been one for wall decor (somewhat of a minimalist), and the few items that are up weren’t chosen by me.

    It’s always a fun conversation when I’m initially dating someone as to why those are up. Unfortunately, getting people you’re dating to watch Star Trek is harder than you would think. 🤣

  • I have 2 foil art pictures. Afaik it's a toner print on cardstock and then a foil is baked on the paper and peeled leaving only the foil on the parts where the toner was earlier.
    One is a moon in silver holographic and another is an entry ticket to "space" with a gold foil print

    Picture:

    Ordered on Etsy. If requested I will try to find the page of the seller.

    • Why are you just ignoring whatever that text panel is next to it. We just what?

  • A few posters I bought from the campus poster sale at the start of the year. (Specifically, a woodblock print, a solar system map and a Cowboy Bebop poster.)

    I have a huge window with a nice view (in a university owned apartment no less!) so I can afford to skimp on the other walls.

  • Some of my prized posessions are watercolor landscape paintings my grandfather painted.

    If real art is an option I would highly recommend it.

  • Some bookcases downstairs, a mirror and then a selection of displates (art printed on metal, basically flush to wall and no horrible picture frames)

    Art is a mixture of abstract, negative animal landscapes and abstract landscapes + one LotR Moria door above the staircase...

  • I'm much the same as @Zane@aussie.zone - lots of bookcases, selection of prints and originals from artists and galleries here and there. We also have a couple of line and wash sketches of my own and several paintings by my SO, a mounted deer skull, a green man sculpture and a couple of landscape photos of mine. Neither of us do family photos.

    In the past, I have had: a large mirror that I turned into a clock, a banner from a Greenpeace group that I was involved with, a tapestry that I friend made for us, a macramé owl that I inherited, a couple of film posters and a bicycle.

  • I didn't realize until my mid 20s that having a house without pictures and wall hanging is weird. It was also when I learned that if you don't have enough lighting it makes a home feel like a mausoleum.

    The answer as to what a person should put on their walls depends on how based a person is or how much they don't care about what others think.

    If you want to get non-traditional with it, hang up movie posters, collages, video game posters, etc. Whatever you like and like to look at.

    If you go traditional and normal, then art is a fantastic idea. Go to your local thrift store and find old art that they have. Local estate sales are also good.

    Personally, I love to commission a painting or two from the artist themselves. Etsy and fiverr painters love to make custom art of whatever you want if you have the money. You're looking at spending anywhere from $10 to a few hundred depending on the size you want.

    It's always fun having a painting of your pet remade in the style of Edvard Munch

  • Mechanical drawings of rockets or planes or computer components. Psychedelic UV tapestries. Pictures of cats. Soviet style space propaganda pictures.

  • Lots of things. A Kramer poster, a backwards clock, a magic eye poster, a Larry Elmore print, a haunted house painting, a chime clock, a painting of Venice.

  • I have a lot of abstract paintings in my room. They're not mine though. They're a collection of my parents who have nowhere else to hang them.

  • Some impasto oil paintings I particularly like, clocks, mirrors, and a few reproduction painting prints here and there :-D

  • posters (miku), my trans flag, shelves with boxes, games, figures, an pkushies on them, and 7 old motherboards thay i plug my excess cables into

    i like my room its so silly

  • Flags of states that my family lives in, paintings my father did, bamboo cutting boards of the states we have family in, family photos, vases with grasses, trinkets passed down from family, movie posters, etc. Basically anything that has meaning to us.

  • Mostly posters and flags in the geeky/gamer/nerd vein, which are taken down and rotated with others every couple years for shits n grins.

  • If you're of drinking age, I highly recommend trying a wine & design type thing. You get to see what you'll be attempting to paint when you sign up, so the colors and vibe can be vetted to see which one you'd want on your wall before spending the time and money. But you also get the awesome activity of having some drinks, painting a thing, and maybe meeting some cool people. If you have a partner, it's also an amazing date idea, or it's dope to bring a platonic friend to. And you don't even need to be good at painting because they teach you step by step what to do, and then help you fix it if you fuck it up horribly. My wife and I have a bunch of paintings up in our apartment (3M stuff, no nails) plus some big canvas prints from our wedding. There are also some small seasonal things we swap out. If you have a craft store near you, check out small decorative projects where you do something pretty simple like paint and glue little premade bits together. Here is an example of a basic thing like I'm talking about, but I'd pick something less "live laugh love" and more whatever your personality jives with. Don't be afraid to nerd out and do Star Wars stuff or whatever you're into. The space is yours, so your comfort and interests should be welcome in your home.

  • A lot of mixed paintings. Mostly morbid ones. Many by Beksinski or Pieter Bruegel and some largely unknown artists like Füssli.

    On walls should be something that inspires you everytime you walk by. Or makes you happy, or pondering. Whatever that might be.

87 comments