Botany of Desire: 16 Favorite Botanical Prints as Decor - Remodelista
A favorite design detail, noted recently: vintage botanical prints in kitchens, bedrooms, and hotel guest rooms.
The owner of a Lisbon inn sourced bright botanical charts, originally from a German primary school, from a shop in Madrid and hung them as posters.
Spotted on Elsie Green: charmingly faded pressed botanicals.
Another bedroom at Baixa House features framed, pressed flora. See Steal This Look: A Portuguese Bedroom with Vintage Charm.
A small botanical print, clipped above a work table, in the studio of a Lisbon ceramicist.
Two small prints in wood frames, along with ochre table lamps, add the only color to a guest house at Portuguese hotel.
Photograph by Rodrigo Cardoso.
A print of the shrub Gorse, native to Ireland, by Irish design studio Superfolk hangs beside a doorway.
In the UK, a more formal arrangement: Wildflower botanical prints hang in a grid above the morning coffee station at The Rectory Hotel: A Chintz-Free Country House in the Cotswolds.
Photograph by Juli Baker.
In a favorite Canadian summer cottage, a vintage dresser, found via a Swedish auction, is papered with botanical prints.
A workspace vignette featuring a reproduction of a vintage botanical chart.
Look carefully: A postcard-sized botanical drawing, roots and all, hangs above the counter in this Amsterdam kitchen.
Photograph by Jeltje Janmaat via House of C.
In an earlier iteration of the Canadian cottage, oversized botanical posters hung in the dining room.
New from Moebe in collaboration with Norm Architects and Paper Collective: Floating Leaves, a series of modern framed botanicals.
Photograph by Karel Balas.
Framed, hand-pressed flora is almost geometric at A London Hotel with a Sense of Joie de Vivre.
An impromptu display: tiny botanical postcards are taped to a marble wall in Kitchen of the Week: A Subtly Splendid Kitchen in North London.
Photograph by Alison Engstrom.
Pin it: At GreenHouse: A Natural Wine Bar in Paris, found botanical drawings are clipped to one wall.
Pressed seaweed, shown here on the mantel in Justine’s Cape Cod cottage, is a watery alternative to land-based flora. See also: all things Botanical Art on Gardenista.