Nature Prints for the Bedroom: Creating a Calm, Grounded Space
The right print on the right wall can change how a room feels entirely. Here's how to use landscape photography to make your bedroom quieter, warmer, and more like somewhere you actually want to be.
Shop Now →Why nature prints work in the bedroom
The bedroom doesn't need to do much. It needs to feel calm, a bit personal, and not like a hotel. Nature prints for the bedroom earn their place because they carry something art that's purely decorative often doesn't: a sense of somewhere real.
A misty forest, a still lake at golden hour, a mountain guesthouse tucked into a cliff face. These images work not because they're beautiful in the abstract, but because they trigger something specific. A place you've been. A place you want to go. A feeling you associate with being outside, away from a screen, breathing slower. That's genuinely useful in a room you're supposed to sleep in.
There's also something to be said for scale. A single well-chosen print above a bed reads as intentional. It anchors the room without overwhelming it. And unlike patterned textiles or bold paint, it's easy to live with long-term because it has a story behind it.
"A still lake at golden hour. A misty forest. These images work not because they're beautiful in the abstract, but because they carry a sense of somewhere real."
What to look for in a bedroom print
Not every landscape print belongs in a bedroom. Some images are better suited to a hallway or a living room, where a bit more visual energy is welcome. For the bedroom, the key word is restraint.
Look for images with a limited tonal range. A soft palette of greens, greys, golds, or earthy browns will sit quietly rather than demand attention. High-contrast drama, while impressive, tends to feel a little loud in a bedroom setting.
Subject matter matters too. Wildlife prints, particularly deer in soft morning light, have an obvious calm to them. Lake and water prints carry a stillness that reads naturally in a bedroom. Mountain shots can work well when the mood is quiet rather than epic, think mist, dawn light, or a single structure in a wide landscape rather than a peak shot for maximum impact.
It's also worth thinking about what the image means to you personally. A print of somewhere you've walked, a coastline you know, a mountain you've stood on, will always feel more at home in your bedroom than something chosen purely on aesthetics. The personal connection is what makes it worth having on the wall.
Placement and sizing
Above the bed is the most common spot for a reason. The wall behind the headboard is the natural focal point of the room, and a single large print there does the job of a headboard feature without the bulk. For a standard double bed, an A1 or A0 print tends to work well. For a single or if you prefer something less dominant, A2 is a solid choice.
The bottom edge of the print should ideally sit around 20-25cm above the headboard. Too high and it floats. Too low and it feels cramped.
If you want something on a side wall or above a chest of drawers, a portrait-format print often works better in those narrower spaces. A tall image of a cable car climbing through cloud, for instance, fits a vertical gap neatly and adds a quiet vertical pull to the room.
For guidance on choosing the right size for your specific wall, the full guide to using nature prints in the home covers sizing in more detail room by room.
Styles and palettes that suit the bedroom
Soft & Earthy
Warm golds, muted greens, misty browns. Think autumnal woodland and golden hour water. Works well with linen, rattan, and natural wood tones. Feels grounded and easy to wake up to.
Cool & Minimal
Pale skies, quiet grey tones, open mountain landscapes. Works well in more pared-back rooms with white walls and simple furniture. Gives the room a sense of space without adding visual noise.
Moody & Atmospheric
Deep greens, foggy forests, misty mountain light. Works well in bedrooms that lean darker, with charcoal walls or velvet textiles. A single print here can make the whole room feel intentional.
Ammersee, Bavaria, Germany
This is Ammersee at golden hour, a Bavarian lake about an hour south of Munich. The boathouse, the still water, the soft starburst of light catching through bare winter trees. It's a quiet image and it stays quiet on a wall. The warm gold tones sit well in a bedroom with natural materials, and the reflected light on the water gives it a stillness that's genuinely restful to look at. Works well above a bed or on a main feature wall.
View Print →Prints worth considering
Wildlife and woodland prints tend to translate particularly well into bedrooms. There's something about an animal in its natural habitat, unhurried, quiet in its own environment, that carries the right kind of energy for a sleeping space. The Bavaria Deer print is a good example: a red deer stag in a foggy autumn landscape, warm tones, soft light. It's specific without being fussy, and it works with a wide range of bedroom styles from earthy and natural to something a little more Scandinavian.
For something with a bit more minimalist restraint, the Deer Wildlife print from the Bavarian Alps has a cleaner, quieter feel. Morning light, earthy tones, the kind of image that doesn't need explaining. It suits rooms that are already calm and don't need much from the art beyond a quiet presence.
Mountain and alpine prints can also earn a place in the bedroom, provided the mood is right. The Aescher Guesthouse print from Appenzell, Switzerland is one that works particularly well in this setting. It's a structure built into a cliff face in the Swiss Alps, and there's something almost meditative about it. The scale of the mountain behind, the smallness of the building. It's the kind of image you can look at for a while without it giving everything away at once.
You'll find more options across the full print collection, covering landscapes from the Alps to the Atlantic coast.
Bavaria Deer, Germany
A red deer stag in the Bavarian countryside, caught in the kind of autumn morning light that makes everything look like it should be left alone. The fog softens the background, the warm tones ground it. As a bedroom print, it hits the right notes: calm, specific, and not trying too hard. Works well in rooms with natural wood, warm textiles, or a generally earthy palette. One of the prints that tends to look better in person than on a screen.
View Print →If you're looking for something with a portrait orientation, particularly for a narrower wall or a space beside a window, the Aiguille du Midi cable car print is worth a look. It's a vertical composition shot in the French Alps above Chamonix, a cable car climbing through high alpine cloud toward the summit station. There's a certain quiet drama to it that works in a bedroom without being loud about it. Cool tones, clean lines, a lot of sky.
For more on how nature and landscape prints work across different rooms in the home, including the living room and study, the guide to nature prints for the home office covers some of the same principles from a different angle.



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