Animals Wall Art
Products in this collection
Chrysler Classic Car Bald Eagle American
Equestrian Woman Riding Chestnut Horse Oil Painting
Cowgirl On Horseback With Rifle Cartoon
Low Poly Horse Portrait Warm Beige Background
Cowgirl Riding Horse Snowy Winter Forest
Woman Riding Horse Beach Sunset Silhouette
Cowgirl Riding Paint Horse Teal Background
White Horse Red Ink Splash Dark Background
Girl Riding Horse Over Jump Autumn
Angry Gorilla Lifting Dumbbell Black Background
Woman Doing Yoga With Sleeping Cat
White Alpaca Snow Mountain Blue Sky
Kangaroo On Beach At Sunset Australia
Kangaroo Silhouette Misty Australian Grassland Field
Guanaco Standing Before Patagonian Mountain Peaks
Reindeer Grazing Under Northern Lights Norway
Sika Deer by Autumn Lake Japan
Sheep Grazing Green Meadow Mountain Lake
Sheep Flock Grazing Snow Capped Mountain
About Animals
Animals have been the easiest thing in the world to look at for as long as people have made pictures. This collection leans into that. You will find a wolf caught mid-stare in falling snow, an elephant turning its ear to the camera, hummingbirds frozen over a flower, the heavy calm of a bear by a river. Some are close studies of fur and eyes; others are wider, the animal small against its habitat. I keep a soft spot for the moody black-and-white predators, but the bright watercolor birds tend to win over most living rooms.
That range is the point of putting animal art on a wall. A single fox print can warm up a hallway that felt cold, and a row of three matching prints reads like a small field guide over a couch. People hang these in nurseries, in home offices where they want something alive but quiet, in reading nooks. If you came in for a specific creature, the Lions and Tigers sets go big and dramatic, while the Pet pieces are gentler and good near a kitchen or a kid's room.
How animals wall art looks in a real room
Scale changes the mood more than people expect. A 16x12 print of a single bird sits nicely on a shelf or in a gallery cluster, while a 40x30 stag over a fireplace becomes the thing everyone looks at first. Every image comes three ways: a canvas stretched on a real wood frame that you hang straight from the box, a flat unframed poster if you have your own frame, or a poster set behind glass for a cleaner edge. A 20x16 canvas runs $69, posters start at $29, so it is easy to mix one large canvas with a couple of small posters without overthinking the budget.
The printing matters with animals because skin tone, feather, and fur are where cheap reproductions fall apart. We use eco-friendly ink that holds the soft grays and warm browns without going flat. Each order ships in a fitted box rather than a rolled tube, so the canvas arrives with its corners square and the poster arrives without a curl you have to fight for a week. If you want to wander before you commit, the wider animal art shelf has horses, ocean life, and birds of prey worth a slow scroll.