Our traditional wallpaper is screen printed by hand on coated paper for a luxe, hand-painted look and feel. We use eco-friendly ground paper that is Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified and manufactured carbon neutral.

Enter a wonderland of fantastical florals with our patterned wallpapers; unleash your rebellious spirit with pretty in punk blooms or take a walk on the wild side with animal prints. Fall for the nostalgic glamour of the Art Deco era or our Victorian Arts and Crafts inspired collections. Get lost in the wooded wonderland of our beautiful botanicals or journey to mythical lands and whimsical worlds.


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As well as our iconic prints, we have you (and your walls) covered with a wealth of interior inspiration to discover, including how-to-hang-wallpaper guides, styling ideas and complimentary decorating consultations so you can create your very own wonder walls with confidence.

Wallpaper has come a long way in terms of quality and durability. With non-woven bases, wallpaper is easy to install, clean, and remove. However, one thing that has not changed is the power of designer wallpaper to transform a room and elevate the ordinary to the extraordinary. With an array of beautiful designs and patterns, designer wallpaper can add a touch of luxury and elegance to any space in your home.

Designer wallpaper can add a touch of luxury and depth to any room in your home. From bold florals to large wall murals, the possibilities are endless. With paste-the-wall technology, designer wallpaper can be applied to various surfaces such as walls, ceilings, and even the underside of staircases. Whether you prefer a country cottage, vintage farmhouse, or modern minimalism aesthetic, there is a designer wallpaper that will fit your interior design goals and bring your home decor dreams to life.

This collection contains files to add wallpapers (background images) to LaTeX documents. It uses the eso-pic package, but provides simple commands to include effects such as tiling. An example is provided, which works under both LaTeX and pdfLaTeX.

A wallpaper remains on the whole unchanged under certain isometries, starting with certain translations that confer on the wallpaper a repetitive nature. One of the reasons to be unchanged under certain translations is that it covers the whole plane. No mathematical object in our minds is stuck onto a motionless wall! On the contrary an observer or his eye is motionless in front of a transformation, which glides or rotates or flips a wallpaper, eventually could distort it, but that would be out of our subject.

The simplest wallpaper group, Group p1, applies when there is no symmetry other than the fact that a pattern repeats over regular intervals in two dimensions, as shown in the section on p1 below.

Examples A and B have the same wallpaper group; it is called tag_hash_112_4tag_hash_113_ in the IUCr notation and *442 in the orbifold notation. Example C has a different wallpaper group, called tag_hash_114_4tag_hash_115_ or 4*2 . The fact that A and B have the same wallpaper group means that they have the same symmetries, regardless of details of the designs, whereas C has a different set of symmetries despite any superficial similarities.

A proof that there are only 17 distinct groups of such planar symmetries was first carried out by Evgraf Fedorov in 1891[1] and then derived independently by George Plya in 1924.[2] The proof that the list of wallpaper groups is complete only came after the much harder case of space groups had been done. The seventeen possible wallpaper groups are listed below in  The seventeen groups.

However, example C is different. It only has reflections in horizontal and vertical directions, not across diagonal axes. If one flips across a diagonal line, one does not get the same pattern back, but the original pattern shifted across by a certain distance. This is part of the reason that the wallpaper group of A and B is different from the wallpaper group of C.

Two such isometry groups are of the same type (of the same wallpaper group) if they are the same up to an affine transformation of the plane. Thus e.g. a translation of the plane (hence a translation of the mirrors and centres of rotation) does not affect the wallpaper group. The same applies for a change of angle between translation vectors, provided that it does not add or remove any symmetry (this is only the case if there are no mirrors and no glide reflections, and rotational symmetry is at most of order 2).

The purpose of this condition is to distinguish wallpaper groups from frieze groups, which possess a translation but not two linearly independent ones, and from two-dimensional discrete point groups, which have no translations at all. In other words, wallpaper groups represent patterns that repeat themselves in two distinct directions, in contrast to frieze groups, which only repeat along a single axis.

The purpose of this condition is to ensure that the group has a compact fundamental domain, or in other words, a "cell" of nonzero, finite area, which is repeated through the plane. Without this condition, one might have for example a group containing the translation Tx for every rational number x, which would not correspond to any reasonable wallpaper pattern.

Crystallography has 230 space groups to distinguish, far more than the 17 wallpaper groups, but many of the symmetries in the groups are the same. Thus one can use a similar notation for both kinds of groups, that of Carl Hermann and Charles-Victor Mauguin. An example of a full wallpaper name in Hermann-Mauguin style (also called IUCr notation) is tag_hash_123_31tag_hash_124_, with four letters or digits; more usual is a shortened name like cmm or pg.

For wallpaper groups the full notation begins with either p or c, for a primitive cell or a face-centred cell; these are explained below. This is followed by a digit, n, indicating the highest order of rotational symmetry: 1-fold (none), 2-fold, 3-fold, 4-fold, or 6-fold. The next two symbols indicate symmetries relative to one translation axis of the pattern, referred to as the "main" one; if there is a mirror perpendicular to a translation axis that is the main one (or if there are two, one of them). The symbols are either m, g, or 1, for mirror, glide reflection, or none. The axis of the mirror or glide reflection is perpendicular to the main axis for the first letter, and either parallel or tilted 180/n (when n > 2) for the second letter. Many groups include other symmetries implied by the given ones. The short notation drops digits or an m that can be deduced, so long as that leaves no confusion with another group.

A primitive cell is a minimal region repeated by lattice translations. All but two wallpaper symmetry groups are described with respect to primitive cell axes, a coordinate basis using the translation vectors of the lattice. In the remaining two cases symmetry description is with respect to centred cells that are larger than the primitive cell, and hence have internal repetition; the directions of their sides is different from those of the translation vectors spanning a primitive cell. Hermann-Mauguin notation for crystal space groups uses additional cell types.

Orbifold notation for wallpaper groups, advocated by John Horton Conway (Conway, 1992) (Conway 2008), is based not on crystallography, but on topology. One can fold the infinite periodic tiling of the plane into its essence, an orbifold, then describe that with a few symbols. 2351a5e196

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