Palette
Beige

Monochromatic Geometric Abstraction
From £13
Lucky You Queen of Hearts
From £13
Summer Bloom Sneakers
From £13
Pink Disco Delight
From £13
Send Noods Fun
From £13
Industrial Gold Connectors
From £13
Abstract Cream Waves
From £13
Mimosa Cocktail Recipe
From £13
Flamingo's Golden Eye
From £13
Vodka Martini Recipe
From £13
Espresso Martini Lilac
From £13
Abstract Teal Swirls
From £13
Blushing Boots Floral
From £13
Bauhaus Pink Exhibition
From £13
Bubbly Cocktail Celebration
From £13
Subtle Cream Folds
From £13
Woman of Serenity
From £13
Abstract Horizon Flow
From £13
Abstract Swirl Blocks
From £13
Bold Noodle Typography
From £13
Le Jardin Blue
From £13
Abstract Cream Folds
From £13
Moscow Mule Refresh
From £13
Cosmic Cowboy Creation
From £13
Floral Spirit
From £13
Wavy Okay Affirmation
From £13
Minimalist Form Abstraction
From £13
Creative Block Crumpled Paper
From £13
Lilac Branch Shadows
From £13
Soft "Iris Bloom"
From £13
Minimalist Wooden Discs
From £13
Zesty Margarita Recipe
From £13
Textured White Abstraction
From £13
Wavy Love Typography
From £13
Dual Glaze Donut
From £13
Little Bunny's Spring Umbrella
From £13
Kitchen Disco Joy
From £13
Abstract Canvas Texture
From £13
Stack of Sweetness
From £13The Okawall guide
How to choose beige wall art
39 curated pieces in this edit — printed on demand on canvas, framed paper, brushed metal and luminous acrylic. Free carbon-neutral worldwide shipping on every order.
Choosing wall art by colour is the fastest way to make a room read as designed. Our beige edit pulls together pieces that share a tonal family — different subjects, different mediums, all anchored in the same palette — so a single choice can carry the whole wall without competing with anything else in the room.
Echo a colour that's already in the room
Pick up beige from the rug, sofa, throw or a single accent. Art that repeats an existing colour anchors the room; art that introduces a brand new colour can fight it.
Stick to one tonal family
If the room already has two strong colours, the art should sit inside one of them. Beige works hardest when it isn't the only thing pulling the eye.
Light changes everything
Beige reads cooler in north light and warmer in west light. If you can, view the artwork on the actual wall before committing to a large format.