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A Sneak Peek Of My New Large Floral Mural

It took me a long time to order the new large floral mural for the studio, but I finally placed my order last Thursday, and it arrived on Saturday! I couldn’t believe that fast turnaround!

The wallpaper pattern is one that I created myself (I showed how I did that here), and that wallpaper was on the studio wall from June 2019 until just a few weeks ago.

As I’ve explained in previous posts, I loved the design, but I thought that some of the colors needed to be tweaked (especially those dark purple flowers that just looked like blobs from a distance), and I wanted the design printed MUCH larger.

I spent several weeks trying to find the right company to print my new large floral design for me. Since it’s not standard wallpaper where the full design fits perfectly onto one width of wallpaper, I needed to have it printed as a mural. Trying to find a company that will print a custom mural from your own picture isn’t difficult. There are plenty of them out there. But finding a company that will work with you to take your seamless, repeatable design, resize it for you, tile the design for you, and print it so that it covers a very specific area of space (like my 16-foot-wide space) is a bit more challenging.

I originally started working with Photowall (the company where I bought the mural that’s in our bathroom), but I ran into a problem with their design system and decided to find another company. So then I started working with Murals Your Way, but I kind of lost confidence when it didn’t really seem like the guy understood what I was wanting.

And then about four weeks ago, right out of the blue and at just the right time, I got a marketing text from Spoonflower (the place I had the original floral wallpaper printed) with some helpful links, and one of them just happened to be about how to turn a picture into a mural using Spoonflower. So I used their tutorial (although I didn’t do mine exactly how they suggested, but their instructions were a great jumping off point for me to understand what I needed to do), and made my new design double the width of the original.

I was so nervous ordering that mural. I went over my design process countless times to be sure I had done everything right, and then I finally got the courage to click that “Place Order” button last week. When it arrived on Saturday, I was nervous and beyond excited to unwrap two rolls and see if I had done it properly. Well, sure enough, I had done it right, and the pattern matched up perfectly!

So after this whole process, my design went from one pattern repeat fitting onto one 24-inch-wide piece of wallpaper (this is what the original 2019 design looked like)…

…to the new 2023 design with one whole pattern repeat spanning the width of two pieces of 24-inch-wide wallpaper.

Now I’m sure what jumps out at you are the extra bits on each side of the individual wallpaper pieces. On the left side of each piece, there’s this small 1/4-inch white strip.

And on the right side of each piece, there’s a 3/4-inch printed area plus another white strip.

Because Spoonflower’s system isn’t really set up to print murals, and because they print their wallpaper design so that they overlap just a bit when you install them (which is a feature that I really love about Spoonflower’s wallpaper), these are little quirks that you have to creatively work around when trying to print a mural using their wallpaper-printing system.

So before installing this mural, I will have to trim both sides of each piece. I’ll have to cut off the little white strip on the left side, and I’ll also trim off the extra 3/4-inch of pattern that was printed on the right, along with the extra white strip.

Once those are trimmed off (you’ll have to imagine the thin white strip on the left edge of the right piece being trimmed off in the picture below), the pattern will fit together seamlessly.

I’m really so pleased with how this turned out. It actually exceeded my expectations, and I can’t wait to get it installed on the wall! I love how those dark purple flowers are now light enough and big enough that they’ll still look like flowers (and not purple blobs) even from the other side of the room.

And this second time around was cheaper than the first since I changed my overall design for the long wall and decided to put lower cabinets all the way across the wall. This time, I only had to order enough wallpaper to go from the ceiling to the countertop, whereas before, I ordered enough to cover the wall from ceiling to floor.

I tried to get a picture of the new mural along with the remnants of the old wallpaper for comparison so you can see how much bigger and brighter the new mural is.

But this is a fairly decent comparison of the two, with the new mural on the left and the original wallpaper on the right. Pretty great, huh? 😀

I didn’t do a tutorial on how I went about turning the pattern into a large mural to have it printed by Spoonflower because I didn’t want to go into so much detail if no one was interested in that much detail. But if some of you are interested in learning how to have a mural printed by Spoonflower, and how to work around their system that’s only set up for standard wallpaper with overlapping seams, I’d be happy to share my process.

Like I said, I started off with their tutorial, but honestly, some of their tutorial didn’t make sense to me. And I wanted to end up with pieces that overlap, like their standard wallpaper does. (I really love that feature!) But their mural tutorial results in pieces that have to be trimmed (which you will never be able to do perfectly by hand) and then they butt up next to each other during installation. And then they show going back to the butt joints between the imperfect cuts (which you will have because you’re not a machine) and filling those in with markers or paint.

I mean, that literally, physically hurts me to see that. Y’all know me well enough to know that that’s going to be a NO from me. I don’t want imperfect butt joints between pieces that then have to be painted or colored with markers.

So while I used their tutorial to help me understand how their wallpaper is printed, and what obstacles I needed to work around in order to use their wallpaper-printing system to print a mural, I made some tweaks to their instructions so that I’d end up with a design that will still have overlapping seams (no butt joints between imperfectly cut pieces needed) and create a seamless, flawless pattern with no obvious joints and no need for coloring or painting in between imperfectly cut butt joints.

All that to say that if there are at least a few of you who would like for me to do a tutorial, I’d be happy to do that. But if no one is interested in doing it themselves, but you just want to see my mural up on my wall in my studio, that’s coming up. I hired two guys to come and move all of the desktop-height outlets up about three or four inches. (The current height worked with my previous cabinet and desktop plan, but they’re too low for the IKEA cabinet plan.) They’ll be here tomorrow morning to start on that. Once they’re done, I’ll be able to install the new mural! I’m hoping to have it done by Friday.


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Sonal

Scoop Sky is a blog with all the enjoyable information on many subjects, including fitness and health, technology, fashion, entertainment, dating and relationships, beauty and make-up, sports and many more.

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