From $89
Dozens of butterflies scatter across a vertical canvas, each wing angled slightly differently so the deep blue ground never repeats the same shape twice. The composition uses that scale, small figures against a big dark field, to pull the eye up the wall rather than across it.
In a kids' room, the vertical format fits a narrow stretch of wall beside a closet or window in a way a wide horizontal piece can't match. It's offered from 12x16 up to 40x60, plain canvas wrap by default or the black floating frame as the upgrade, and the dark ground hides scuffs better than a pale print.
Checkout, shipping, and returns are handled by WallCanvasArt.
Printed on archival-grade, poly-cotton blend canvas with fade-resistant inks rated to hold color for 75+ years. Gallery-wrapped and ready to hang straight out of the box.
Available in five sizes per orientation, from 12x16 up to 40x60 inches, as a 1.25 inch canvas wrap or with a black floating frame.
Free U.S. shipping on all orders. Printed and shipped from U.S.-based facilities. Most orders arrive within 5 to 10 business days.
The butterflies aren't uniform: some wings carry visible brush texture, others sit nearly flat, which gives this vertical wildlife wall art its shimmer from across the room, the kind of blending you'd expect from an anime-style piece rather than a flat cartoon outline. The blue ground shifts from near-black at the edges to a lighter navy toward the center, a gradient you only notice up close.
A blue butterfly canvas for a kids room like this reads well next to simpler shapes, so treat it as the anchor piece rather than one of several patterns on the same wall. Browse more tall-format options in our kids room wall art collection.
The composition was built around a tall field of blue, with butterflies stacked from bottom to top rather than spread wide. That vertical shape fits narrow wall sections in a kids' room, like the strip beside a doorway or the gap flanked by two windows, spots where a horizontal print just wouldn't sit right.
Not usually. A dark blue field acts more like a window than a bold color block, so it tends to sit quietly against white, gray, or pastel walls instead of fighting them.