Collection: Pink Wallpaper

Soft and stylish pink wallpapers that bring warmth, charm, and a gentle decorative touch to any room.

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Showing 357 of 357 products
  • Soft Pastel Flowers

    Soft Pastel Flowers

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  • Soft Nursery Flowers

    Soft Nursery Flowers

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  • Soft Flower Fields

    Soft Flower Fields

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  • Soft Floral Memories

    Soft Floral Memories

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  • Soft Floral Harmony

    Soft Floral Harmony

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  • Soft Daisies

    Soft Daisies

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  • Sky Blue Tartan Pattern

    Sky Blue Tartan Pattern

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    $9.00
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  • Sketched Stripes

    Sketched Stripes

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  • Shabby Peonies

    Shabby Peonies

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  • Sea Waves Pattern

    Sea Waves Pattern

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    $9.00
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    $9.00
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  • Scandinavian Aesthetic Seamless Pattern

    Scandinavian Aesthetic Seamless Pattern

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    $9.00
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  • Sage Modern Botanical

    Sage Modern Botanical

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    $9.00
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    $9.00
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  • Sage Dandelions

    Sage Dandelions

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  • Sage Birds Fly

    Sage Birds Fly

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    $9.00
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    $9.00
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  • Sage Art Deco Wave

    Sage Art Deco Wave

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    $9.00
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  • Sage Art Deco

    Sage Art Deco

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  • Rusty Flowers

    Rusty Flowers

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    $9.00
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  • Rusty Blossom

    Rusty Blossom

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    $9.00
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  • Romantic Flowers Pattern

    Romantic Flowers Pattern

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    $9.00
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    $9.00
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  • Romantic Dusty Flowers

    Romantic Dusty Flowers

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    $9.00
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    $9.00
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  • Ribbon Ties

    Ribbon Ties

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    $9.00
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    $9.00
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  • Retro Floral Pop

    Retro Floral Pop

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    $9.00
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  • Retro Daisy Trail

    Retro Daisy Trail

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More Patterns

Trending Collections

Industrial

Wallpapers that bring structure, depth, and quiet balance to your space, designed to enhance raw materials, clean lines, and the objects that define everyday life.
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Tropical

Wallpapers with lush character and gentle rhythm, soft botanicals, sun-faded palms, and tropical motifs reimagined for homes that balance warmth, memory, and modern ease.
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Farmhouse

Rustic textures and organic warmth, softened through clean lines and neutral tones, perfect for grounded spaces that feel both natural and intentional
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Coastal

Airy designs inspired by sea-washed mornings, linen textures, and sun-faded hues, bringing the feeling of a calm summer retreat into everyday spaces.
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Pink wallpaper spans a wider design register than its reputation might suggest — from the quietest, barely-there blush tones and warm dusty roses through to saturated coral, confident magenta, and richly layered botanical designs where pink is one voice in a more complex chromatic conversation. At Tomono, the pink collection is built around this range: tonal surfaces for bedrooms and dressing spaces that want warmth without statement, floral wallcoverings with the kind of painterly detail that rewards close attention, geometric prints in rose and terracotta palettes, and deeper fuchsia designs that function as genuine feature wall anchors in living rooms and dining spaces. Pink, at every point in its spectrum, brings a warmth to a wall that cooler neutrals consistently fail to replicate.

The room context shapes which pink works. A pale blush or soft rose across a bedroom feature wall creates a quality of warmth and softness that the room carries even with the lights low — it's a colour that changes how the light in a space feels rather than simply how the wall looks. Deeper, more saturated pinks used on a single statement wall in a living room or dining space create a different kind of impact: confident, layered, and surprisingly versatile against dark wood furniture, aged brass, and warm neutral textiles. Botanical prints and vintage-inspired floral wallcoverings in pink tones are among the most design-forward choices in this category — they sit comfortably in contemporary interiors without reading as nostalgic or overtly feminine.

Peel and Stick Pink Wallpaper

Every design in this collection is available as peel and stick wallpaper — removable, renter-friendly, and easy to apply on smooth, primed surfaces. Pink is one of the most-requested accent wall colours, and the peel and stick format makes it genuinely practical to experiment across the tonal range — from a pale blush in a bedroom to a deeper coral in a living room — without permanent commitment or wall damage on removal.

Is pink wallpaper too feminine or too niche for a considered interior?

The assumption that pink is an exclusively feminine or inherently niche choice has been substantially revised by interior design practice over the past decade. Deep dusty roses, warm terracottas with pink undertones, muted blush surfaces, and botanical prints that incorporate pink as one element of a broader palette all appear consistently in high-end residential and commercial interiors without any specifically gendered context. The shade and finish do most of the work in determining how a pink reads: a deep, warm rose in a matte finish alongside dark wood and aged brass reads as sophisticated and grounded, while a very pale, glossy pink in the same room would read very differently. Pink's connotations are almost entirely a function of how it's used.

How do I choose between a blush, a dusty rose, and a deeper pink for my room?

The choice is primarily about atmosphere and existing light. Pale blush and soft rose tones are the most spatially generous — they add warmth without carrying strong colour weight, and work across multiple rooms and furniture styles without demanding a fully coordinated scheme. Dusty and muted roses have a more sophisticated, vintage-adjacent quality that suits bedrooms, dressing rooms, and living spaces with layered, textural interiors. Deeper, more saturated pinks — coral, fuchsia, magenta — make a stronger statement and work best as contained feature walls rather than full-room treatments, particularly in rooms with good natural light where the depth of colour reads as deliberate rather than overwhelming.

What furniture and material pairings work best with pink walls?

Warm natural wood tones — oak, walnut, cane, rattan — are consistently the most successful pairing across almost every pink shade: the natural warmth of the wood aligns with pink's inherent warmth in a way that cooler materials don't. Aged brass and gold metalwork adds richness and prevents the combination from feeling flat. Neutral upholstery in linen, cotton, and natural textiles allows the wall colour to lead without creating a fully saturated palette. For deeper or bolder pinks, dark tones — charcoal, deep navy, forest green in accessories — create contrast that grounds the room and stops the colour from reading as one-dimensional.

Can pink work as a wallpaper choice in a room used by adults, not children?

Consistently and effectively — and some of the strongest applications of pink in interior design are in adult spaces like dining rooms, studies, and master bedrooms. The key is treating pink as a colour with the same design logic as any other: considering its undertone, its relationship to the room's existing palette, and the finish and pattern of the wallpaper rather than reaching for the most expected or most literal version of the colour. A deeply saturated, matte floral wallpaper in a dusty rose and terracotta palette behind a dining table reads as maximalist and considered, not childish. A tonal blush surface in a bedroom with dark furniture and layered textiles reads as warm and refined.

Will pink wallpaper make my room feel smaller or darker?

Lighter pinks — pale blush, soft rose, warm white-pink tones — are among the most spatially generous colours available, and tend to make rooms feel warmer and slightly larger rather than more enclosed. Deeper, more saturated pinks do absorb some light, but the effect in a well-lit room is more enveloping than oppressive — particularly on a single feature wall rather than across all four surfaces. The finish also matters: matte pinks absorb light and feel more intimate; lighter or slightly sheen finishes reflect it and feel more open. For smaller rooms, a pale tonal or softly patterned pink is the most reliable choice.

What interior styles suit pink wallpaper most naturally?

The contemporary maximalist interior — layered, colour-positive, pattern-forward — is where pink wallpaper currently has the strongest design presence, particularly in botanical and large-scale floral designs. But the colour is stylistically more flexible than that: soft blush tones work in Scandi and Japandi interiors as a warm neutral alternative to grey; muted rose and dusty pink surfaces suit transitional and eclectic rooms; deeper, richer pinks appear in traditional interiors as a warmer alternative to the period reds and terracottas they historically sat alongside. The pattern and palette of the wallpaper do more stylistic work than the pink itself.

Does pink wallpaper work in a room with green plants and natural materials?

Pink and green are one of the most naturally successful colour combinations in interior design, rooted in the visual language of botanical prints and garden aesthetics. The contrast between warm pink tones and the cooler, organic quality of green creates a palette that feels alive and layered rather than flat. In a room with significant plant presence, a pink wallpaper — particularly a botanical print or a soft tonal rose surface — connects the interior to the living elements of the space in a way that cooler neutrals or more graphic palettes rarely achieve. Natural materials — cane, rattan, linen, terracotta — complete this combination with consistency.

How does pink wallpaper perform in different lighting conditions?

Pink is one of the most light-sensitive colours in the spectrum, which is both a strength and a consideration. In warm incandescent or candlelight conditions, pinks deepen and become richer — this is why pink is such a consistently strong dining room choice, where evening lighting is the primary experience. In cool daylight or fluorescent light, the same pink can read as paler, cooler, and occasionally more washed-out. Testing a sample in the room's actual lighting conditions — at different times of day and under the artificial light you use most — is more important with pink than with most other wallpaper colours, because the shift between natural and artificial light can be significant.