The Sage Gallery wall art set is the printable I'm talking about below. Five PNG files, 300 DPI, $9 instant download.
See the Sage Gallery set, $9 → Buy now, $9 →Sage green is a desaturated, slightly gray green. It sits between blue-green and yellow-green, which is why it reads as a neutral rather than a statement color. Designers reach for it because it quiets a room the way warm white walls do, but it gives you more depth. It also pairs with more accent colors than most greens: terracotta, cream, ochre, dusty blue, brass, soft black, and natural wood all sit next to sage without clashing.
If your room has white or warm-white walls, oak or walnut floors, and one or two warm-metallic accents, sage green wall art ties the palette together. If your room is cool gray walls with chrome or brushed nickel, sage still works as long as you keep the accent colors in the same temperature range.
The set is five pieces designed to hang together. The palette runs sage through terracotta, dusty blue, ochre, and cream, with one piece anchoring each role. Each file is a separate 300 DPI PNG sized for its frame ratio.
Pick sizes by the wall you have, not the frame you want. A small wall behind a sofa or bed reads best with five pieces in the 10 to 14 inch range, framed. A long hallway or open-plan living room handles 14 to 18 inch frames. Match the print size to the room scale: too small looks like posters; too big swallows the wall.
All five files ship at 300 DPI, so any of those sizes prints cleanly. If you go larger than 16x24 for the portraits, switch to a print service that can handle oversize rather than your home printer.
Any photo print service will work. The cheapest route is your home inkjet on matte or satin photo paper, which costs under $1 per print plus paper. For more accurate color and heavier stock, FedEx Office and Staples print from a USB or uploaded file at sizes up to 24x36. Costco Photo is competitive on price and ships to your door. Shutterfly and Nations Photo Lab are good for archival paper or canvas upgrades.
Bring the file as a PNG, ask for matte or satin (not glossy, which flattens sage into a single tone), and request no color correction unless you have a calibrated monitor. If the printed sage looks too blue, your monitor is over-saturated and the print is probably right; trust the file.
Three arrangements work for a five-piece gallery wall: a horizontal row (works above a sofa or console), a 3-over-2 grid (works over a bed or dining bench), or an offset cluster (works in a hallway or stair landing). Lay the five prints on the floor first and arrange them in each pattern; the one that feels right is the right answer.
For spacing, leave 2 to 3 inches between frames. Trace each frame onto kraft paper, label them, and tape the templates to the wall. Step back and adjust until the spacing looks even. Drive nails or hooks through the template centers, remove the paper, and hang the framed pieces.
This set is for anyone decorating a room with a sage, warm-neutral, or earthy palette. It is for renters who can't paint, new homeowners on a budget, and gift-givers who want a polished look without commissioning a custom piece. The five files give you the same range a designer would specify, without the design fee.
$9, instant download. Stripe checkout, no account needed, no email required for delivery.
See the Sage Gallery set, $9 → Buy now, $9 →Sage green pairs with warm neutrals (terracotta, cream, ochre, sand), soft blacks, and dusty blues. The Sage Gallery set uses sage with terracotta, dusty blue, ochre, and cream so each piece supports a sage-centered room without competing.
Common sizes for a gallery wall are 8x12, 12x18, or 16x24 for 2:3 portraits; 10x10, 12x12, or 14x14 for 1:1 squares; 12x8, 16x12, or 18x12 for 3:2 landscapes. The files ship at 300 DPI so each ratio prints cleanly up to the largest of those sizes.
FedEx Office, Staples, Costco Photo, Shutterfly, and your local print shop will print the PNGs on matte or satin photo paper. Upload the file, choose the size you want, and pick up the prints the same day.
Lay the five pieces on the floor first and pick an arrangement: a horizontal row, a 3-over-2 grid, or an offset cluster. Trace each frame onto kraft paper, tape the templates to the wall, and adjust until the spacing is even (2 to 3 inches between frames is standard). Drive nails through the template centers, remove the paper, and hang the framed prints.