Mandala Tapestries

Find your tapestry by room and color

  • A calm bedroom

    Serene blue behind the bed

    the quietest of the four — reads peaceful as a headboard backdrop

  • A bold statement wall

    Burnt red & imperial blue

    the loudest colorway — built to be the thing people notice over a couch

  • A modern, graphic room

    Black mandala

    edgy and clean — a sharp backdrop for a yoga or meditation corner

  • A warm, golden-toned room

    Azure & gold

    the warmest of the set — adds glow to a dorm or first apartment


Mandala tapestry questions, answered

Each Mandala Tapestry measures 94.50 inches wide by 82.70 inches tall — close to eight feet across. That width is the point: one panel covers the full wall behind a queen or king bed as a headboard backdrop, fills a blank stretch in a dorm or first apartment, or anchors the wall over a couch without needing a second piece next to it.

It's 100% cotton, hand-woven in Jaipur, India by local artisans. Cotton hangs with a soft, fabric drape rather than the stiff, shiny flatness of a printed polyester tapestry, and it doubles as a lightweight bed throw or a backdrop for a yoga corner. All four colorways — Blue, Black, Blue & Gold, and Blue & Red — share the same cotton weave and dimensions.

Three common ways for a cotton tapestry this size. Slide a thin curtain rod or wooden dowel along the top edge and rest it on two brackets for the cleanest look. For a rental, a row of pushpins or small nails across the top corners holds it flat. Wall clips or bulldog clips on a cord work too. Smooth out folds before you commit the top line — that's what keeps it from sagging.

The wall behind the bed is the most common spot — it acts as a soft headboard and fills the space a frame can't. Beyond that: a meditation or yoga corner, the wall over a couch in a living room, a dorm or college-apartment wall you can't paint, or a ceiling drape. The mandala spiral pulls the eye to its center, so it reads best on the largest unbroken wall you have.

Treat it like any 100% cotton textile. Spot-clean small marks with mild soap and a damp cloth. For a fuller clean, a cold gentle machine wash with like colors and an air-dry keeps the weave and color intact — skip the hot dryer, which can shrink cotton and fade the pattern over time. Shake it out and re-hang while slightly damp to drop most of the creases.

The mandala is a circular, geometric design from ancient eastern traditions, and its symmetry is what makes it work as a focal point — the eye lands in the center and settles. That central pull is why it suits a calm bedroom or a meditation corner, and the spiral detail gives a boho or layered-textile room the hand-made, well-traveled look that a flat printed poster can't fake.