Floral wallpapers that will make your home bloom this spring
Floral wallpaper is a simple way to brighten and uplift a home
Rewild your interiors this spring with some of the most lovely and energising florals to hit the walls in decades.

Retro wallpapers are rolling up everywhere in 2026, and though familiar, these super-expressive lovelies are reimagined for a 21st-century, Instagram eye. Looking to a decade, surprisingly, it’s the 1980s that has broken through with its sugar-high, shameless sense of fun. Used in conjunction with the right furniture and given enough room, the late 20th century is a fantastic look for anyone reaching for nostalgic designs with a slightly tuned-in contemporary personality.

We are now interchanging the terms wallpaper and mural, as traditional paper steps up to the feature wall that once staged an eye-watering paint colour. Paint-the-wall wallpaper and peel-n-stick digital panels are artful, affordable and make an immediate impact as maximalist bespoke canvases for any space. Choose your preferred style, scale it to the application, and there are thousands of storied choices in various colourways available in custom sizings.
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With colour flashing back into our lives this year, no one does colour and detail with quite the same grotesque-gorgeousness as Timorous Beasties of Glasgow. If you’re unfamiliar with the work of Alistair McAuley and Paul Simmons, go online and take a trip on the wild side with surreal imaginings and taxonomy. Their deliberately loud, dramatic designs cheerfully detonate old favourites like toile while still retaining a heritage quality (throwing out flouncy 18th-century shepherdesses for gritty scenes of urban Glasgow with street life and misbehaving youths).Â

Another wallpaper house skilled at narrative papers, Divine Savages, enters the evolving world of the design co-lab this year. It is teaming its much-beloved wallpapers with the British studio of Ca’Pietra, which markets hand-painted tiles. Stirring up patterned wallpaper and patterned tile might seem like a dated cloakroom adventure, but with a bit of aesthetic balance and a cool ground for the tile or paper, it’s a charmer. The marketing team says, “Having worked closely with Ca’Pietra on both their home renovations and the stunning powder room of their Bath headquarters, it was a natural progression to join forces.”
When picking up motifs, themes and colours from a wallpaper and setting them against a patterned tile intentionally, is something anyone can try, just test, test, test before ordering tile or wallpaper by the metre. There are six choices in square 13cm Ca’Pietra tiles inspired by Divine Savages Brambles wallpaper, and 6 inspired by their Lovebirds wallpaper. Hand-made at €28.70 per tile, expect a six-week lead time. capietra.com. The prickly, scrambly wallpaper, The Brambles, is €223 per roll in four colourways

Noticed the return of wallpaper to the kitchen on Instagram and in various home magazines? It signals our love of comfort, colour, and calming reminders of the great outdoors in our great indoors, and most particularly in our favourite room in the house. Wallpaper is an excellent way to decorate the endless metres of cool, glittering cabinets and counter surfacing.Â

It’s a super pretty old-fashioned paper inspired by a French archive document connected to Highgrove House (home of King Charles). The repeated tracery of delicate serpentine paths, beehives, tiny deer, acers, foxes, and pheasants is feminine without being too sugary. Prefer a stripe? Explore Apothecary Rose, also in the Highgrove collection. 10m roll, €196

There’s a new term being bandied about in design circles — midimalism. It’s an interior with more intimate “you” in it, but not the eccentric, powerfully patterned interior of maximalism. There are also fewer intergenerational things prowling every surface. Busy, highly ornamental wallpaper introduces complex, fascinating visual design without crowding the room physically with furnishings we don’t need, and clutter that just demands dusting.
Take this technique to the fifth wall (the ceiling), and there’s still room to breathe. Byobu wallpaper from Mind the Gap, made in Transylvania, takes from Japanese traditional design. It’s printed on a metallic foil that distils natural and artificial light beautifully in a bookish corner, stately hall, or very grown-up bedroom; from €289 for three rolls, Mind the Gap is a good brand to explore as it balances the tradition of repeating wallpaper with the freer expression of a picture mural. Consider how you would like your paper to influence the proportions of the space. The repeat is slightly vertical, leading the eye up, pushing back a low ceiling.



