Okay so I just spent like three weeks going through Homary’s wall art collection because honestly I kept seeing their ads everywhere and finally caved, and here’s what you actually need to know before dropping money on their stuff.
The Abstract Canvas Prints Are Actually Really Good
Started with their abstract collection because I needed something for a client’s minimalist dining room and didn’t want to go the Etsy route again. The quality surprised me? Like the canvas is actually stretched properly, not that flimsy stuff where you can see wrinkles after a month. Got this blue and gold abstract piece that’s like 40×60 inches and the colors are way more saturated in person than on screen, which could go either way depending on what you want.
The frames they use are about 1.5 inches deep which is perfect if you’re going for that gallery wall vibe. My cat knocked one off the credenza while I was photographing it (of course) and it survived without even a dent so points for durability I guess.
Sizing Is Weird Though
Here’s the thing nobody tells you – their size chart is accurate but the visual proportions photograph differently than you’d expect. I ordered what I thought would be a statement piece for above a sofa and it arrived looking almost too big? Had to completely rework the gallery wall arrangement. Measure your space like three times and maybe go one size down from what you think you need.
The Metal Wall Art Collection
Oh and another thing – their metal pieces are having a moment right now and I’m kinda obsessed. Ordered this geometric mountain range thing for my own living room and the powder coating is actually powder coated, not that spray paint situation some cheaper brands do. Took forever to hang though because the mounting hardware they include is just okay.
Wait I forgot to mention – the weight distribution on the larger metal pieces is sometimes off center. Found this out the hard way when one kept tilting to the left no matter how many times I adjusted it. Ended up using my own D-rings and wire which fixed it but like…you shouldn’t have to do that for a $200 piece of wall art you know?
Installation Reality Check
- The hanging template they send is printed on regular paper that tears easily
- You’re gonna need actual wall anchors for anything over 20 pounds
- Their “easy installation” claim is true only if you have a stud finder and level handy
- Some pieces come with sawtooth hangers which I personally hate for anything large
Textured Wall Art Panels
This is gonna sound weird but their 3D textured panels are either amazing or terrible depending on your lighting situation. I installed a set in a client’s entryway with good natural light and it looked incredible – all those shadows and dimensions really pop. Then tried similar ones in my basement office with only overhead lighting and they just looked…flat and kinda sad?

The texture is hand-applied which means each piece is slightly different. Got two of the same design for a symmetrical look and they don’t perfectly match. Called customer service about it and they were like “that’s the artisanal nature of the product” which fine, but warn people about that upfront maybe.
What Works Best
The ones with gold leaf accents are surprisingly not tacky. I’m usually pretty anti-gold-everything but these have this subtle elegance that photographs really well. Used them in three different client projects now and everyone asks where they’re from.
Photography Prints and Framed Art
Okay so funny story – ordered their black and white cityscape series thinking it would be generic stock photography and it’s actually pretty decent art photography. The prints come with real glass not plexiglass which is both good (looks better) and annoying (weighs a ton and you’ll panic about it breaking).
My client canceled last minute so I spent an hour comparing the print quality to some West Elm pieces I had on hand and honestly? Pretty comparable. The paper quality feels substantial, colors don’t look pixelated even on the 48-inch prints. Framing is basic black wood but it’s real wood not MDF pretending to be wood.
The Nature Photography Collection Specifically
Their botanical prints are everywhere right now and for good reason I guess. The color reproduction on the leaf prints is actually accurate – I compared one to the real plant in my studio and the green tones matched which never happens with mass-produced prints. Still think they’re kinda boring for most spaces but if you need something safe and pretty for a rental or staging, they work.
Price vs Quality Reality
Here’s the deal with Homary’s pricing – it’s all over the place. Sometimes you’re getting an absolute steal and sometimes you’re paying CB2 prices for HomeGoods quality. The sale section is where it’s at though. I’ve snagged pieces for like 40% off that were genuinely good, but you gotta stalk the website because inventory moves fast.
Shipping took about two weeks for most items which isn’t amazing but also not terrible. Everything arrived well-packaged with those foam corner protectors. Only had one piece show up damaged (glass shattered) and they replaced it without making me go through customer service hell so that was refreshing.
What I Actually Keep Recommending
The oversized single-panel abstracts in neutral colors are my go-to now for clients who want impact without commitment. They’re bold enough to make a statement but subtle enough that you won’t hate them in six months. The quality-to-price ratio on these is honestly better than a lot of boutique art sites I’ve used.
Their line drawings and minimalist sketches though? Skip them. You can find better versions on Etsy for half the price and they’ll be actual original art not mass-produced prints.
The Weird Specialty Pieces
They have this whole section of decorative wall sculptures that I ignored at first but then used one in a modern farmhouse project and it totally worked. The quality control seems better on their sculptural pieces than the prints honestly. Everything feels solid and well-constructed.

Oh wait – avoid the mixed media pieces with fabric elements. Ordered one thinking it would add texture to a bedroom and it just collected dust immediately and looked cheap in person. The photos make them look way more high-end than they are.
Installation Tips Nobody Tells You
So I learned this after installing probably 30 pieces of their wall art at this point – their hanging hardware assumes you have perfect walls. If you’re in an older building or have textured walls, you’re gonna need to improvise. Keep a variety of wall anchors on hand because what they include often isn’t enough.
The multi-panel sets are the trickiest. They give you a spacing template but it’s designed for perfectly level ceilings and floors which like…where? I always use a laser level for anything with more than two panels because eyeballing it will make you want to throw things.
My Current Testing Setup
Right now I have about seven different Homary pieces installed in my studio for long-term testing and most are holding up well after four months. The canvas prints still look taut, no sagging or warping. The metal pieces haven’t rusted or discolored even though my studio gets humid in summer.
One thing I’m watching is the hanging hardware – a couple of the D-rings are starting to look stressed on the heavier pieces. Might need to reinforce those eventually but for now everything’s still secure.
The printed photographs are showing zero fading so far which is good because I positioned one in direct afternoon sunlight specifically to test this. Was watching The Bear while hanging these actually and got so distracted I hung one crooked and didn’t notice for three days but anyway.
What’s Worth Your Money
Bottom line – if you’re looking at Homary for wall art, stick with their canvas abstracts, metal geometric pieces, and the larger statement photography. Skip the small decorative prints, mixed media stuff, and anything that looks too trendy because the quality isn’t there to justify keeping it once the trend passes.
Their customer service is decent, shipping is reliable, and returns are possible but kinda annoying with the restocking fees. Order during sales if you can wait, and always size up your hanging hardware because theirs is just barely adequate for the weight of most pieces.

