From $89
Farmhouse dining rooms lean toward beige and shiplap so often that a piece with real color can feel like a risk, but Farm Sunset is built to handle exactly that kind of room. A blazing sky of orange, purple, and blue stretches above a field of blooming flowers, with a tractor cutting a path through the gold light below.
The vertical format suits a dining room wall or an entry landing better than a wide horizontal spread, and the maximalist color treatment keeps it from reading as a typical rural print. Sizes run from 12x16 to 40x60, and choosing the frame with black edging sharpens the sky's color against a farmhouse wall.
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Printed on archival-grade, poly-cotton blend canvas with fade-resistant inks rated to hold color for 75+ years. Gallery-wrapped and ready to hang straight out of the box.
Available in five sizes per orientation, from 12x16 up to 40x60 inches, as a 1.25 inch canvas wrap or with a black floating frame.
Free U.S. shipping on all orders. Printed and shipped from U.S.-based facilities. Most orders arrive within 5 to 10 business days.
A field of blooming flowers spreads out beneath a sky built from layered orange, purple, and blue, with a small tractor tracing a path through the gold light near the horizon. The brushwork stays loose enough to keep the whole scene feeling painted rather than photographed, and that shift is what turns a simple farm view into maximalist farm landscape art.
For a dining room or entry that wants more color than the usual neutral palette, the ideas in maximalist wall art ideas cover similar ground. It suits anyone hunting for colorful sunset landscape canvas art that skips the muted, photographic look most farm prints default to.
It's more likely to be the piece that breaks up the neutral tones than clash with them. The rich orange, purple, and blue sky gives a beige or shiplap dining room a single strong color anchor without needing to repaint anything.
It leans stylized. The sky and field use bold, saturated color rather than a photographic palette, so it reads as a maximalist landscape piece more than a literal farm photograph.