Google Reviews
"Beautiful prints, fast shipping !"
Google Reviews
"Amazing vintage poster selection"
Google Reviews
"A hidden gem for art lovers"
Google Reviews
"Beautiful prints, fast shipping !"
Google Reviews
"Amazing vintage poster selection"
Google Reviews
"A hidden gem for art lovers"
Google Reviews
"Beautiful prints, fast shipping !"
Google Reviews
"Amazing vintage poster selection"
Google Reviews
"A hidden gem for art lovers"
Google Reviews
"Beautiful prints, fast shipping !"
Google Reviews
"Amazing vintage poster selection"
Google Reviews
"A hidden gem for art lovers"
  • No bestsellers in this collection
  • No bestsellers in this collection

Café Culture on the Wall

The Coffee collection begins with the atmosphere of the café: roasted beans, porcelain cups, brass counters, steam on glass, and the soft theatre of people lingering over conversation. As a poster theme, coffee carries the history of European streets, modern advertising, and domestic ritual. This new MORYARTY edit will gather vintage print design, café graphics, botanical references, and art print compositions that make coffee feel less like a drink than a daily ceremony. Expect wall art with warmth, rhythm, and the quiet charm of places where ideas are allowed to sit.

From Trade Labels to Espresso Bars

Coffee imagery has always belonged to movement: ships crossing oceans, sacks marked with origin names, hand-painted shop signs, and bold lithographic labels built to be seen from the pavement. The collection will look toward that visual language, especially the confident lettering and saturated browns found in early advertising posters. It will also leave room for quieter studies: grinders, moka pots, ceramic cups, café tables, and botanical coffee branches drawn with the precision usually associated with botanical prints. Together, these references trace coffee from plant to ritual, from colonial commodity to neighborhood habit.

Warm Palettes for Lived-In Rooms

In interiors, coffee prints work beautifully because they understand hospitality. A cinnamon-brown poster can echo walnut shelves, leather chairs, or terracotta tiles; cream paper tones sit naturally beside linen curtains and stone counters. For kitchens and breakfast corners, pair this collection with kitchen wall art that shares ingredients, tableware, or market imagery. In living rooms, coffee-themed decoration can soften modern furniture, especially when balanced with beige prints or the grounding notes of brown wall art. The mood is sociable, tactile, and slightly nostalgic without becoming sentimental.

How to Build a Café-Inspired Gallery Wall

Think of the gallery wall as a conversation between textures. One large coffee poster can provide the aroma, while smaller prints add pauses: a black typographic menu, a fruit study, a map of a port city, or a quiet photograph of street life. Dark oak, black metal, or narrow natural frames suit the subject better than anything ornate. To sharpen the composition, introduce the graphic restraint of black and white posters; to calm it, use the edited spacing found in minimalist wall art. Coffee imagery pairs especially well with ceramics, open shelving, and morning light.

A Collection Waiting to Brew

Because this collection is just opening, its direction can be deliberately generous. It may include Belle Époque café posters, mid-century espresso graphics, Japanese-inspired still lifes, scientific drawings of Coffea arabica, or contemporary art print interpretations of the cup as a small architectural form. What will unite them is not a single style, but a sensibility: warmth without heaviness, appetite without clutter, design with a trace of human pause. For home decor, coffee offers a rare balance of familiarity and sophistication. It belongs near the table, of course, but also beside a reading chair, in a studio, or along a hallway where its scent is imagined rather than poured.