Vintage wallpaper draws on the design vocabulary of the past — the hand-drawn florals of the 1950s, the bold graphic geometry of the 1960s, the earthy tonal prints of the 1970s, and the restrained damasks and stripes that ran through decades before and after — and makes it feel considered rather than nostalgic in a heavy-handed way. Tomono's vintage-inspired collection is built around the idea that pattern from previous eras earns its place in a contemporary interior precisely because it carries history and craft. These are designs with a point of view: heritage wallcoverings, retro-inspired prints, and decorative wallpaper that holds its own alongside modern furniture and fittings without requiring a period-matched room to do so.
The visual range is deliberately broad. Some designs lean toward the romance of vintage floral wallpaper — layered blooms, trailing stems, soft background tones — while others reference the confident repeat geometry of mid-century modern wallcovering or the ornate symmetry of Victorian and Edwardian decorative styles. What connects them is a quality of line and pattern that feels drawn rather than generated, and a colour palette that sits in the warmer, more settled range of the spectrum rather than chasing contemporary brights.
How to Use Vintage Wallpaper in a Modern Interior
Vintage wallpaper works most naturally in rooms where atmosphere matters — bedrooms, living rooms, dining rooms, and hallways where the layered quality of a heritage print adds depth rather than distraction. A single feature wall is often the most effective approach, particularly with bolder retro or floral designs, letting the pattern anchor the room without overwhelming it. For those who want the look without long-term commitment, several designs in this collection are available in peel and stick and removable formats — a genuinely renter-friendly option that makes vintage-inspired design accessible in any space.
Can vintage wallpaper work in a contemporary or minimalist interior?
It can, and when it is done well, the contrast is what makes the room. A single wall of heritage floral or retro geometric print placed in an otherwise calm, modern space creates the kind of considered tension that makes an interior feel layered and lived-in rather than straight from a showroom. The key is restraint everywhere else — let the wallpaper be the most decorative element in the room and keep surrounding furniture and accessories relatively simple.
Will vintage wallpaper make a room feel dated rather than intentional?
The difference between a room that reads as dated and one that reads as intentionally vintage comes down to how the rest of the space is styled. Vintage-inspired wallpaper paired with current furniture, natural materials, and a considered colour palette feels deliberate and design-led. Where rooms go wrong is in matching the wallpaper too literally — surrounding a 1970s floral print with 1970s furniture tips the balance from curated into costume. Mix eras confidently and the wallpaper becomes a feature rather than a time capsule.
Which vintage styles work best in smaller rooms?
Smaller-scale repeat patterns — ditsy florals, fine trellis designs, compact geometric prints — tend to work better than large bold repeats in smaller rooms, as they add visual interest without the pattern dominating the space. Lighter background tones help too, keeping the room feeling open while still delivering the warmth and character that vintage-inspired wallcovering does best. A small bathroom or cloakroom is actually an ideal space for a bolder vintage print, since the intimacy of the room makes the pattern feel immersive rather than overwhelming.
What is the difference between vintage wallpaper and vintage-inspired wallpaper?
Original vintage wallpaper refers to designs produced in earlier decades, often found in antique markets or salvage stores, and can be difficult to source in sufficient quantity for a full room. Vintage-inspired wallpaper, which is what Tomono offers, takes the design language, colour palette, and pattern sensibility of those earlier eras and reproduces it in a contemporary format — with better material quality, consistent batch production, and modern installation options including peel and stick formats. You get the aesthetic without the uncertainty of working with a single discontinued roll.
What rooms suit a heritage floral or retro print best?
Bedrooms are one of the strongest contexts for vintage-inspired floral wallpaper — the warmth and softness of a heritage bloom or trailing botanical print creates exactly the kind of enveloping, personal atmosphere that a sleeping space benefits from. Dining rooms carry bolder vintage prints well, particularly damask or large-scale geometric designs that feel formal and considered in a room designed for occasion. Hallways are another natural fit, where a vintage wallcovering makes an immediate impression and sets a tone for the rest of the home.
How do I choose between a floral, geometric, or damask vintage design?
Start with the mood you want the room to have. Vintage florals — particularly the layered, hand-drawn styles of the 1950s and 1960s — bring warmth, softness, and a romantic quality that suits bedrooms and living rooms. Retro geometric designs from the 1960s and 1970s carry more energy and graphic confidence, working well in spaces where you want a stronger visual statement. Damask and ornate repeat patterns reference an earlier decorative tradition — more formal, more architectural — and suit dining rooms, hallways, and rooms with period features that the pattern can speak to.
Does vintage wallpaper suit homes that already have period features?
Period architecture — original cornicing, sash windows, fireplaces, panelling — gives vintage-inspired wallpaper a context that makes it feel entirely at home rather than applied as decoration. In a Victorian or Edwardian terrace, a damask, floral stripe, or ornate repeat pattern has a natural logic to it; in a 1960s or 1970s property, a bold retro geometric print makes the same kind of architectural sense. That said, vintage wallpaper does not require period features to work — it simply requires a room styled with enough consideration to make the choice feel intentional.
How do I combine vintage wallpaper with colour in the rest of the room?
The most reliable approach is to draw directly from the wallpaper itself — pick one or two of the secondary colours within the print and use them for soft furnishings, a painted woodwork colour, or an accessory tone. This creates cohesion without making the room feel like it has been over-coordinated. Avoid introducing colours that are not already present in the wallpaper, as they tend to compete rather than complement. With darker vintage prints, a warm neutral on the remaining walls — an off-white, a soft stone, or a muted sage — lets the feature wall read clearly without the space feeling heavy.