Kids Wall Art
Products in this collection
Sphynx Cat Riding Pink Car Amusement Park
Sphynx Cat Astronaut Cardboard Rocket Space
Sphynx Cat Astronaut Cardboard Rocket Space
Sphynx Cat Astronaut Cardboard Rocket Space
Blue Whale Playing Chess In Park
Beaver Working Laptop Coffee Shop Cartoon
Beaver Dancing In Pink Ballet Studio
Golden Retriever Playing Xylophone With Dinosaur Skeletons
German Shepherd Party Hat Carousel Fun
German Shepherds Clown Costumes Ferris Wheel Carnival
Detective Orange Cat Holding Magnifying Glass
Golden Retriever Puppy Hot Air Balloon Fantasy City
Golden Retriever Hot Air Balloon Fantasy Town
Golden Retriever in Colorful Candy Fantasy Land
German Shepherd Superhero Flying Over City
Superhero German Shepherd Flying Over City Sunset
Superhero Girl Flying With German Shepherd
Giraffe Reading Book By Christmas Fireplace
Golden Retriever Hot Air Balloon Fairytale City
About Kids
This is the corner of the shop I send people to when a nursery or a kid's bedroom feels a little bare. Kids wall art covers a lot of ground here: friendly jungle animals lined up across a wide print, hot-air balloons drifting over pastel hills, rocket ships, alphabet charts, little woodland scenes with foxes and owls peeking out from the trees. Some of it is sweet and soft for a baby's room, some of it is bolder and a bit goofy for an older kid who has opinions about dinosaurs. The thread running through all of it is warmth. These pieces are meant to make a small person feel like the room was built for them.
What works in a child's room
I tend to steer parents toward calmer color stories for sleep spaces and the louder, busier prints for play areas and reading nooks. A pair or a trio at the kid's eye level usually beats one big piece floating up near the ceiling, since the whole point is for them to actually look at it. If your child is animal-obsessed, the Kids Animals set is the easiest place to start, and there is plenty of dragon and unicorn material in Kids Fantasy And Magic for the ones who want a little more story on the wall.
Formats matter more than people expect in a kid's room. The unframed poster is the low-stress pick: tape it up, swap it next year when the obsession changes, no big deal and no glass to worry about near a bunk bed. Posters start at $29. Canvas on a real wood frame is what I'd hang over a crib or a dresser, since it has no glass and a bit of weight to it, and a 20x16 canvas runs $69. There is also poster behind glass if you want something that reads a touch more finished. Sizes run from 16x12 up to 40x30, so you can fit a narrow stretch of wall between two windows or fill the big blank space above the bed.
Everything ships flat in a fitted box rather than rolled in a tube, which spares you the curling and the flattening-under-books routine, and we print with eco-friendly ink. If you are pulling together a whole gallery wall, the softer pieces in Art For Girls mix in nicely with the animal and balloon prints. Pick what makes your kid grin and worry about the rest later.