We earn a commission for products purchased through some links in this article.
1
Black feature wall
Brent Darby / House Beautiful
2
Faux headboard
Photography: Rachel Whiting, Styling: Hannah Deacon, Direction: Sarah Keady
This fabulous bedroom feature wall is a great lesson in resourcefulness. A faux protruding headboard has been fashioned from simple plywood, forming a shelf for bud vases and a celebration of colourful flowers.
Pictured: Bedlinen at Linen Me
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
3
Two-tone
Photography Polly Wreford, Styling Rebecca de Boehmler, Direction Sarah Keady
Simplicity itself – provided you have a spirit level and some patience. We love that this two-tone wall breaks the panelling at an unexpected point.
Pictured: House Beautiful Maura Chaise Sofa at DFS
4
Panelling
Brent Darby
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
5
Gallery wall
Barker and Stonehouse
The joy of a gallery wall is that it lets personality shine. Some are drawn to something neat and uniform, and some love the chaos of a mismatched collage. Either way, it’s a feature wall that can continue to evolve as your tastes do.
Pictured: Furniture at Barker & Stonehouse
6
Stripes
Brent Darby
Stripes make for a great feature wall idea and provide some clever visual trickery too. Vertical stripes make rooms appear taller and ceilings higher, and generally speaking, the larger your space, the wider your stripe should be. Wide stripes lose impact in small spaces, while narrow stripes can be overwhelming in big rooms.
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
7
Statement wallpaper
Magnet
The wallpaper that launched a thousand Instagram posts. Every piece in Sophie Robinson’s collection with Harlequin is a ready-made feature wall (see no.14 for the fabulous mural). This is a brilliant one for a country kitchen, in sugary sweet colours and adorned with hand-drawn flowers.
Pictured: Sophie Robinson x Harlequin Woodland Floral Wallpaper
8
Ombre effect
Photography Simon Bevan, Styling Jennifer Haslam, Direction Sarah Keady
An ombre wall is a really impactful idea if you’re decorating with a tight colour palette. This example mutates from a deep ocean blue through to a turquoise and finally a barely there white-blue. But no DIY here; an ombre painted wall is very much one for the experts.
Pictured: House Beautiful Darcy Sofa Bed at DFS
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
9
2D tricks
Annie Sloan
This artistic headboard is chalk painted and continued onto the wall to create a beautiful backdrop. ‘Using paint to emulate furniture shapes into 2D on your wall is a fantastic way to make an impactful statement,’ says artist Annie Sloan. ‘For best results, use the boundaries of your bed and design up from that width.’
Pictured: Paint at Annie Sloan
10
Open shelving
IKEA
The joy of a full-length kitchen shelf is that you can pile on crockery, pots, pans and glasses and call it a feature wall…
Pictured: Shelves from Ikea
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
11
Memory wall
Layered
Create a happy corner of your home where you display your most treasured items for a hit of dopamine whenever you pass by. The magic is in the mix, so add meaningful photos, trinkets from travels abroad, heirlooms, or anything else that sparks joy.
Pictured: Stig Lindberg Bersa Rug at Layered
12
Plates
Penny Morrison
This pretty display of plates is a totally innovative tool for a living room, and so easy to replicate. Mix and match your plates for a similar impact, and you could dial it up by covering your entire wall in a playful plate display.
Pictured: Plates from Penny Morrison
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
13
Panels
Dulux
A panelled effect can be jazzed up using paintwork, like with this dusky pink bedroom using Dulux paints. An orange shade is used on one of the sections to highlight brighter accessories.
Pictured: Paints from Dulux
14
Murals
Harlequin
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
15
Wooden cladding
Brent Darby
Wooden cladding adds a touch of modern farmhouse and is especially useful if you have a contemporary home without interesting architectural detailing.
16
Curtains
h&m
This is surely one of the simplest feature wall ideas on our list. Curtains don’t have to stop at the borders of a window and can instead extend across your walls (taking it behind the bed works wonderfully here) to add a lightweight pleated feature.
Pictured: Bedlinen and accessories at H&M
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
17
Modular shelving
Marcus Lawett | String
Make a feature wall with modular shelves and style a curation of books, photographs and decorative objects.
‘With the infinite range of combinations available, in timeless materials like walnut, ash and oak, String’s shelves open up a whole range of possibilities for a design scheme, so you can make as big a statement as you would like and even create a work of art out of your shelves,’ says Bo Hellberg, CMO at String Furniture.
Pictured: Modular shelving at String
18
Zellige tiles
Brent Darby / House Beautiful
Chimney breasts welcome a feature treatment. The rough and organic texture of the Zellige tiles used here feel warm and rustic in an otherwise contemporary space.
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
19
Unexpected tiling
Bert & May
Tiles have long been used to introduce colour and pattern to areas of the home that are high traffic, but uses are expanding and becoming more creative. This feature bedroom wall has been covered in brilliant Bert & May tiles in colours and curved shapes that nod to the revival of 70s design influences.
Pictured: Wall tiles at Bert & May
20
Cascading vines
Photography: Rachel Whiting, Styling: Hannah Deacon, Direction: Sarah Keady
This fabulous cascading wall mural makes the most of the soaring ceilings and eye-catching mouldings in this Victorian home. We love that the colours have been picked up so closely in the adjoining living room to blur the lines from one room to the next.
Pictured: Aula Hummingbird Mural at Wallpaper Direct
Rachel Edwards is the Style & Interiors Editor for Country Living and House Beautiful, covering all things design and decoration, with a special interest in small space inspiration, vintage and antique shopping, and anything colour related. Her work has been extensively translated by Elle Japan and Elle Decor Spain. Rachel has spent over a decade in the furniture and homeware industry as a writer, FF&E designer, and for many years as Marketing Manager at cult design retailer, Skandium. She has a BA in French and Italian from Royal Holloway and an MA in Jounalism from Kingston University. Follow Rachel on Instagram @rachelaed
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below
Advertisement – Continue Reading Below