How to Style a New Build Home with Art Prints
How to Style a New Build Home with Art Prints
There are around 200,000 new homes built in the UK every year. And while moving into a brand new property comes with plenty of advantages — no chain, no surprises, a blank canvas — it also comes with a very specific decorating challenge: how do you make a new build feel like a home?
New builds are notorious for their white walls, neutral carpets, and identikit layouts. Every room looks the same. Every house on the street looks the same. The bones are good, but the personality is entirely absent. That's where you come in — and art prints are one of the fastest, most affordable, and most impactful ways to change that.
This guide covers everything you need to know about styling a new build with wall art, from choosing the right prints for your interior scheme to hanging them confidently in a property where you really don't want to make unnecessary holes.
Why new builds are harder to style than older homes
Older homes come with built-in character — original fireplaces, coving, picture rails, period features that give rooms a natural focal point and a sense of history. New builds don't have any of that. The walls are smooth, the rooms are square, the lighting is recessed and uniform.
This sounds like a decorating advantage — and in some ways it is. A blank canvas means nothing to work around. But it also means nothing to work with. Every decorating decision you make has to carry more weight, because there's no existing character to fall back on.
Art prints solve this problem directly. A well-chosen print — or a carefully curated group of prints — creates visual interest, establishes a colour story, and immediately signals that a room is lived in and loved. It's one of the most efficient uses of a decorating budget in a new build.
Start with your colour palette
Most new builds come with off-white or magnolia walls — a blank backdrop that works with almost any colour direction you choose to take. Before you start buying art, it's worth deciding on a rough colour palette for each room. Three colours — a dominant neutral, a secondary tone, and an accent — is enough to create a coherent scheme.
Once you have a palette in mind, you can choose prints that either sit within it or introduce your accent colour in a controlled way. This is far more effective than buying prints you love individually and hoping they'll work together once you get them home.
Our neutral prints collection is a popular starting point for new build homes — warm taupes, soft creams, and muted tones that complement rather than compete with light, neutral interiors. From there, you can layer in bolder pieces as your confidence with the space grows.
The rooms that matter most in a new build
Living room
The living room is usually where new build owners feel the blank canvas most acutely. High ceilings, a large expanse of wall above the sofa, and recessed lighting that feels clinical rather than warm — it's the room that most needs personality added quickly.
A gallery wall above the sofa is one of the most effective solutions. Rather than one large print, a curated group of three to five prints creates visual warmth and gives the room a genuine focal point.
Our Perfect Pairs collection is designed exactly for this — two prints curated to hang together, available in sizes from A5 to A1. Start with a pair and build outwards over time as you get a feel for the space.
For new builds with open-plan living areas, consider using art to define different zones. A group of prints above the sofa area distinguishes it from the dining space. Consistent framing — all black frames, or all natural wood — ties the zones together without making the whole space feel like one undifferentiated room.
Hallway
The hallway is the first thing you and every guest sees when they walk through the front door. In new builds, hallways tend to be narrow and functional — a corridor rather than a room. A strong piece of art, or a tight line of three prints in matching frames, immediately changes that.
Portrait-format prints suit the proportions of most new build hallways. Choose something with energy — a travel print, a bold botanical, a Japanese woodblock — that sets the tone for the rest of the house. First impressions are everything, and in a new build you have to create them entirely from scratch.
Kitchen and dining area
New build kitchens are often open to the dining area, creating a large, functional space that can feel cold without warmth added. Art prints work beautifully in kitchen-diners — on the wall above a dining table, at the end of a kitchen island, or in a small cluster above a breakfast bar.
Our botanical prints are consistently popular in kitchen spaces. Herbs, flowers, and foliage bring a natural, organic quality that softens the hard lines of modern kitchen units and appliances. A pair of A3 botanical prints in simple frames above a dining table is one of the easiest styling wins in a new build.
Bedroom
New build bedrooms often have the same problem as the living room — smooth white walls and no natural focal point. Above the headboard is the most important wall in the room.
A single large print (A2 or A1) makes a strong, confident statement above a double bed. If you prefer something softer, two A3 prints hung symmetrically either side of centre creates a more balanced, hotel-like feel. Our Japanese art prints work particularly well in bedrooms — the calm, considered aesthetic of Japanese art sits naturally in a space designed for rest.
Children's bedroom and nursery
New build nurseries are typically small, square rooms with no character whatsoever. A small gallery wall of three or four A4 prints is the quickest way to make a nursery feel warm, playful, and personal — and because our prints are unframed, they're easy to swap out as your child grows and their tastes change.
Practical tips for hanging art in a new build
New build walls are built differently from older homes — they're often plasterboard rather than solid brick or stone, which means a few practical differences worth knowing about.
Use the right fixings. Standard picture hooks work on most new build walls, but for heavier frames on plasterboard, use hollow wall anchors rather than standard rawlplugs. They grip the board from behind and hold much more securely.
Be strategic about holes. Plan your layout carefully before making any holes — the paper template method (cutting paper to the size of each frame and taping it to the wall with masking tape) is invaluable here. Live with the arrangement for a day before committing.
Consider your light. New builds often have large windows and good natural light, but recessed ceiling lighting creates pools of light rather than warm ambient glow. Position art where it catches natural light where possible, and consider adding a picture light or directional lamp for evening use.
Avoid direct sunlight. South-facing rooms in new builds can get strong direct sunlight, which will fade prints over time. Either hang art away from direct sun or use frames with UV-protective glass.
Choosing an interior style for your new build
One of the advantages of starting from scratch in a new build is the freedom to choose a coherent interior style from the beginning. A few that work particularly well with art prints:
Scandi / Japandi — clean lines, natural materials, muted palette, lots of white and wood. Japanese woodblock prints, botanical illustrations, and abstract minimal prints all suit this aesthetic beautifully. Our Japanese art prints collection was made for Japandi interiors.
Contemporary British — a warmer, more eclectic take on modern living. Botanical prints, mid-century inspired pieces, and William Morris textiles all work well here. This style is particularly popular in UK new builds because it adds the period warmth that the architecture itself lacks.
Maximalist / eclectic — bold colours, gallery walls, lots of personality. New builds are actually well-suited to this approach because the neutral bones support whatever you layer on top.
Coastal / Mediterranean — increasingly popular in UK homes, this style brings warmth, light, and a relaxed holiday feeling. Soft blues, sandy neutrals, botanical and travel prints all contribute to this aesthetic.
Making a new build feel like home
The question every new build owner asks is some version of: when will this feel like mine? The answer is faster than you think, if you make deliberate choices early.
Art is one of the most personal things you can put on a wall. It communicates taste, history, and personality in a way that furniture and soft furnishings alone cannot. A home with bare walls — however nicely furnished — still feels like a show home. A home with art on the walls feels lived in within days.
You don't need to fill every wall immediately. Start with the rooms you spend the most time in — the living room and bedroom — and build from there. Choose prints that genuinely mean something to you, in a palette that works with your scheme, and hang them at the right height. The rest follows naturally.
Browse the full Stanley Street Studio collection — all fine art giclée prints, printed to order in Leicestershire, from £12.95.
All prints are unframed and arrive rolled in a protective tube, ready to frame. Printed to order in our Leicestershire studio on 250gsm museum-grade paper using eco inks on FSC-certified paper.