William Morris Honeysuckle Art Print
Honeysuckle is one of William Morris's earliest and most charming textile designs — a delicate, intimate pattern that reflects his love of English garden flowers and the craftsmanship of medieval textiles.
About the design
Designed in 1876, Honeysuckle is among Morris's most botanically faithful patterns. Unlike some of his more stylised later designs, Honeysuckle retains a naturalistic quality — the climbing tendrils, paired leaves and trumpet-shaped flowers are recognisable as the plant Morris would have known from the gardens of Kelmscott Manor. The design was produced as a printed cotton furnishing fabric and later as a wallpaper, with the flowing repeat pattern lending itself naturally to both applications.
The soft, warm palette of terracotta, sage green and cream makes Honeysuckle one of the most approachable and versatile designs in the Morris & Co. canon — neither as bold as Strawberry Thief nor as restrained as Willow Bough, it occupies a beautifully balanced middle ground.
About this print
Our Honeysuckle art print is giclée printed on 250gsm museum-grade acid-free paper in our Leicestershire studio, using archival eco inks that faithfully reproduce the warm, botanical tones of Morris's original design. Every print is made to order, with zero waste.
Print details
- Giclée printed on 250gsm museum-grade acid-free paper
- Archival eco inks — colour-fast and fade-resistant
- Available in five sizes: A5, A4, A3, A2 and A1
- Unframed — arrives rolled in a protective tube, ready to frame
- Standard A-size frames fit perfectly — available from IKEA, Dunelm and M&S
- Printed to order in our Leicestershire studio
- FSC-certified paper, plastic-free packaging
How to style it
Honeysuckle's warm, earthy palette suits kitchens, hallways, bedrooms and living rooms equally well. It works beautifully in traditional British interiors and equally in warm, eclectic or botanical-themed schemes. Pairs naturally with other floral Morris designs — Golden Lily, Marigold or Strawberry Thief — for a cohesive gallery wall. A natural wood or terracotta-toned frame enhances the warmth of the palette.