Most yoga wall art falls into two camps: pale silhouettes that vanish into the paint, or a wall of inspirational quotes nobody reads twice. You can do better than both.
Start with one pose that means something
The print that earns its place is usually the pose you're chasing or the one you always come back to. A Dancer for the balance you're building, a Lotus for the seat you sit in to breathe. Pick for meaning first and the wall takes care of itself — a print tied to your own practice beats anything generic.
Our Dancer's Pose print — a pose to work towards, on the wall where you'll see it.
Hang a trio as a flow
One print is a picture; three is a statement. Choose poses that read as a sequence — Warrior II, Tree and a seated pose, say — and hang them in a row or a tidy grid. Because the whole asana series shares one warm palette, any three sit together without clashing.
Let the colour do the work
Warm saffron and terracotta act as an accent the way a rug or a cushion does — they pull a neutral room together and give the eye somewhere to land. If your walls are off-white or grey, a hot-toned print is the cheapest way to add warmth without repainting anything, and it ties back to whatever wood, brass or leather you already have in the room.
Mind the eye line
The most common mistake is hanging too high. The centre of a print (or the centre of a group) wants to sit around eye level — roughly 145–150cm from the floor. Over a sofa or a bed, drop it so the bottom edge floats a hand's width above the furniture, not stranded near the ceiling. Gallery walls look high because the rooms have high ceilings; yours probably doesn't, so resist the urge.
Our Warrior II print — the pose everyone pictures when they picture yoga.
Frame it, or leave it raw
A simple frame in oak, walnut or black lifts a print and protects it — keep the frame plain so the art does the talking. If framing isn't in the budget, a good unframed print clipped to a wooden poster hanger or held with washi tape looks deliberate rather than studenty, and it's far easier to swap out when you fancy a change.
Renting? Hang it without the holes
No drilling required. Adhesive strips hold a light framed or unframed print without marking the wall, a leaning shelf lets you prop and rotate pieces at will, and poster hangers turn a print into something you can move room to room. None of it costs your deposit.
Build a corner, not just a wall
If you practise at home, hang the art where you actually face during practice — in front of your mat, at standing eye level. A print you look at every time you flow turns a patch of floor into a room you've chosen on purpose, and gives you a fixed point to steady a balance.
Pro Tip: Hanging a group? Keep an even 5–8cm gap between frames and line them up on a shared centre line. Lay them out on the floor first and shuffle until it looks right — far easier than re-drilling the wall.
Where to start
Pick one pose you love, choose a size that suits the wall, and live with it before you build the set. Browse the full asana series when you're ready to add the second and third.
What size yoga print works best on a wall?
For a single print on a feature wall, go large — a 24×36" reads from across the room. Above furniture, a 16×24" usually sits best. Small 8×12" prints work in a group of three or more, where the set is the statement rather than any one piece.
How many prints should I hang together?
Odd numbers tend to look more relaxed — one bold piece, or a trio. Keep them to one palette or one theme (all asanas, say) so the grouping reads as deliberate rather than collected at random.