The Ania Zwara Line
The Ania Zwara Line is built around watercolor — not the washed-out kind, but the hand-painted, layered approach that shows brushstrokes and lets pigment pool at the edges. Ania Zwara, a Polish surface pattern designer and watercolor instructor, painted each design by hand before it became wallpaper. The collection leans floral and botanical — meadow grasses, loose peonies, trailing vines — in palettes that run Arctic white, oatmeal, mustard, baby blue, black. It's the kind of nursery wallpaper that doesn't feel precious, or the kind of powder room accent wall that feels considered without trying.
The prints hold their softness in strong light. They pair well with linen, whitewashed wood, brass fixtures, and the kind of furniture that doesn't shout. Fraya in Arctic or Oatmeal works in a quiet primary bedroom; The Dutchess in Black or Mustard anchors a girls' room or a reading nook. The watercolor texture keeps them from feeling flat against a wall.
A $2 sample shows how the pigment reads in your light, or browse the full wallpaper catalog to see how Ania's work sits alongside the rest of the range.

































































































