There's a particular feeling that hits every spring — that urge to open the windows, move things around, and make the house feel alive again. One of the easiest and most beautiful ways to do that? New wall art.
We've been obsessing over vintage botanical and floral prints lately. There's something about the soft watercolour style, the delicate linework, the warm cream-toned paper textures — they look expensive but feel timeless. And the best part? Many of these vintage-inspired prints are completely free to download and print at home.
Why vintage spring prints work in any home
Unlike trendy modern prints that can look dated within a season, vintage-style botanical art has a staying power that's hard to beat. The muted palettes — cream, blush, sage, terracotta — sit comfortably alongside almost any furniture colour or existing art. They work in open plan living rooms just as well as they do in small bedrooms or hallways.
Spring florals are particularly versatile. A simple bouquet of daffodils in a thin black frame. Cherry blossoms printed large and leaned against a wall. A row of small botanicals lined up along a shelf. The possibilities are genuinely endless.
What's in the free pack
We've selected our favourite spring prints from the Venusiya collection — tulips, wildflowers, cherry blossoms, botanical studies and soft floral watercolours. Each one is available as a high-resolution download, suitable for printing at home on a standard A4 or Letter printer, or getting printed at your local print shop for a more polished result.
Print them on plain white paper for a clean modern look, or try a warm cream card stock for something that feels more antique. A simple white or natural wood frame from any home store is all you need to complete the look.
Tips for printing at home
Getting a great result from a home printer is mostly about paper choice. Standard 80gsm copy paper works, but upgrading to a 120–160gsm matte photo paper will make a noticeable difference — the colours look richer and the print feels more like a proper art print. If your printer has a "best" or "photo" quality setting, use it.
For larger prints (A3 or above), most home printers won't cut it. Your local print shop or a service like Snapfish or Photobox can print large format for just a few dollars, and the results are genuinely impressive.
Framing ideas
The easiest way to display these prints is in simple frames. IKEA's RIBBA frames are popular for a reason — they're cheap, clean and come in a range of sizes. For a gallery wall, mixing a few different frame styles (but keeping the same colour — all black, all white, or all natural wood) creates an intentional, curated look.
If you want something even more relaxed, lean a larger print against a wall, or use washi tape to pin a few small ones to a corkboard or directly on a white wall. No commitment, all the impact.
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