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ArtSource prints run from 8×12 inches (20×30 cm) to 32×48 inches (81×122 cm), all in a 2:3 portrait ratio. This guide matches each size to the walls it suits, and explains when to choose paper, canvas or a ready-to-hang frame.
| Size | Metric | Tier | Works well |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8×12" | 20×30 cm | Small | Shelves, desks, gallery walls, narrow nooks |
| 12×18" | 30×46 cm | Small–medium | Hallways, bathrooms, paired or in threes |
| 16×24" | 40×61 cm | Medium | Above a desk, dresser or console table |
| 20×30" | 50×76 cm | Large | Above a sofa or bed, as part of a pair |
| 24×36" | 61×91 cm | Statement | A focal wall, above a sofa on its own |
| 32×48" | 81×122 cm | Statement (canvas) | Large open walls, stairwells, lofts |
Availability varies by format: paper prints start at 12×18", canvas reaches 32×48". Every product page lists the exact sizes offered for your region.
Match the furniture, not the wall. Art above a sofa, bed or sideboard should span roughly two thirds of the furniture’s width. Above a 200 cm sofa, that means around 130 cm of art: one 32×48" canvas, a 24×36" print with breathing room, or a pair of 20×30" prints hung a few centimetres apart.
Hang at eye level. Galleries hang work so its centre sits about 145 cm from the floor. On an open wall, that single habit makes any size look intentional. Above furniture, leave 15 to 25 cm between the furniture and the bottom of the frame instead.
The whole catalogue uses a single 2:3 portrait ratio. That is deliberate: 2:3 is a standard framing ratio, so a paper print drops into an off-the-shelf frame, and any two prints from the catalogue hang together as a set without fighting each other. It also means you can start small, and reorder the same artwork larger in the same colours later; the composition is identical at every size.
Not sure which artwork to size up? Start with what makes a patent print, or open any print in the shop and use the room preview to see each size against furniture before you order.