The Best Cliffs of Moher Wall Art for Your Home
Not the postcard shot. The real thing.
Shop Now →The Cliffs of Moher are one of the most visited places in Ireland, which means they're also one of the most photographed badly. Finding Cliffs of Moher wall art that actually captures the place rather than just documents it takes a bit of sorting. Most of what's out there is the same over-saturated hero shot from the main viewing platform: cliffs left, ocean right, done. It's recognisable, but it doesn't hold up on a wall. This guide is for anyone who wants something better, whether you've stood there yourself or you're putting Ireland on the wall because it means something to you.
What Makes a Good Cliffs of Moher Print
The postcard shot is taken from the same spot by almost everyone who visits. You know the one. Full frontal view of the cliff face, sky above, Aran Islands somewhere in the distance on a clear day. It's fine as a photograph. As a print you live with, it gets flat quickly. There's no depth to pull you in, no particular moment. It's a record of being there. That's not the same thing as something worth looking at every day.
The north end of the cliffs, past O'Brien's Tower toward Aill na Searrach, is where most serious photographers head. The crowds thin out noticeably, the cliff face curves into the frame rather than sitting flat against it, and the drop feels real in a way it doesn't from the main platform. A print taken from that section looks completely different from the standard shot — there's movement in it, a sense that you're part of the edge rather than looking at it from a safe distance.
The Atlantic weather at Moher changes fast enough that two photographers standing in the same spot an hour apart can come back with completely different images. A shot taken in soft, overcast light reads very differently from one caught at low sun — neither is wrong, but they suit different rooms and different moods. When you're looking at prints, pay attention to whether the light feels like something that actually happened, or whether it's been pushed so far in post-processing that it no longer looks like County Clare at all.
For more on how Irish coastal photography translates to the wall, our guide to Cliffs of Moher Irish prints covers the broader collection in detail.
Cliffs of Moher – Clare, Ireland
Shot at golden hour when the light sits low over the water. The cliff face picks up warmth that doesn't last long — maybe twenty minutes on a clear evening. This version works well in living rooms with natural timber, linen, and warm neutral tones.
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Colour or Black and White for Cliffs of Moher Wall Art
This is worth thinking about before you buy, because the two versions suit completely different rooms. Colour coastal prints are beautiful but they're particular — they need a room that doesn't fight back. Warm whites, natural wood, linen, stone. Put a strong green-and-grey Atlantic shot next to a boldly coloured sofa or busy wallpaper and neither will look good. Colour landscapes need breathing room.
The black and white version is more forgiving, and in some rooms it's the stronger print. It strips out the weather and the season and leaves you with the geology — the sheer weight of the cliff face, the texture of the stone, the way the Atlantic sits beneath it. If your room already has a lot going on visually, monochrome is almost always the right call. It works in modern interiors, traditional ones, hallways with dark paint, rooms with very little natural light.
That said, there's something specific about seeing the Cliffs of Moher in colour — the exact shade of the Atlantic on a day with cloud cover, the green of the cliff top grass against grey stone. If that's the version that takes you back to standing there, go with it. Just make sure the room is ready for it. You can see both options across the black and white Cliffs of Moher print and the colour versions in the collection.



Where to Hang It at Home
Coastal prints have a lot of sky and water in them, which gives them a natural calm. That makes them good for rooms where you want to slow things down — a living room, a bedroom, a home office. The wide horizontal format of most Moher shots suits a wall above a sofa or a sideboard better than a narrow chimney breast. If you're working with a tall vertical space, the O'Brien's Tower sunset print lends itself to that format more naturally than the wide panoramic versions.
Size matters more than people expect. A 30x40cm print in a large living room looks like an afterthought. The same image at 70x100cm becomes the room. For a hallway, 50x70cm tends to be the right call — big enough to stop you in your tracks, small enough to not crowd a narrower wall. The full range is available across the print collection, and every size is made to order.
For gift buyers: a print of somewhere specific is a different thing entirely from a generic Irish gift. If someone has been to Moher — or grew up in Clare, or has family there — a print of that coastline sits differently on the wall than anything you'd find in an airport. It's the specificity that makes it land.
"The prints that work best in living rooms are the ones with space in them. Sky. Water. Somewhere for the eye to rest."


Cliffs of Moher – Tower at Sunset
O'Brien's Tower at the end of the day. The sunset version of the cliffs is specific in a way the standard views aren't — the tower gives the image a fixed point, a sense of place rather than just scale. Works well in hallways and home offices where you want something with presence without filling the entire wall.
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Five versions of the cliffs. Different light, different moods, colour and monochrome. Printed on museum-quality paper and shipped to your door.
Browse Prints →I've been to Moher in all kinds of weather. The quiet end of the cliffs, away from the visitor centre, is where the place actually reveals itself. That's what I try to bring back in the prints — not the landmark, but the feeling of being on that edge with the Atlantic below you and nothing else in any direction.
Mark, Chamonix Prints













