Last updated: · By Stanislav Arnautov · Berlin · 50 min read
Quick answer: Skateboard art works in every room — a bold focal piece above the living-room sofa, a calm piece above the bed, durable glassless decks in the kitchen and bathroom, a striking deck in the hallway or up the stairs, and personality in the office, nursery, or games room. This ultimate guide covers every room, with placement, size, and style for each. Design your own deck. From ~$140, ships from Berlin.
One of skateboard art’s greatest strengths is its versatility — it works beautifully in every room of the home, from the living-room feature wall to the smallest bathroom, each room calling for its own approach to placement, size, and style. A bold multi-deck statement anchors a living room; a calm piece soothes a bedroom; durable, glassless decks shrug off the humidity of a kitchen or bathroom; and the tall deck suits narrow hallways and staircases perfectly. This ultimate 2026 guide is the complete room-by-room reference — every room covered, with exactly how to place, size, and style skateboard art for each — whether a classic or your own custom design.
For broader context on decorating room by room, publications such as Architectural Digest, House Beautiful, Elle Decor, and Apartment Therapy are useful references; for archival print standards, see ASTM International. DeckArts ships from Berlin with a 30-day return. See also our best rooms guide, ideas guide, and how to choose guide.
Why Skateboard Art Suits Every Room
Skateboard art suits every room because it combines qualities that work anywhere: a striking but adaptable shape, a warm and durable material, archival permanence, and total versatility of subject and style. The same medium can be a bold living-room statement or a calm bedroom accent; it copes with kitchen and bathroom humidity where framed glass struggles; and it fits narrow walls that defeat conventional art. Because you choose the artwork, the size, and the format, you can tailor a deck to any room’s function and mood. So skateboard art suits every room — adaptable, durable, versatile, tailored to each space. For the medium overall, see our complete guide and pros & cons guide.
Universal Placement Principles
Before the individual rooms, a few principles apply everywhere. Height: centre the art (or the middle of an arrangement) around eye level, roughly 145–150cm from the floor — the gallery standard and the fix for the most common mistake of hanging too high. Scale: fill roughly 50–75% of the wall or the furniture below; when in doubt, size up. Above furniture: leave ~15–25cm between the top of a sofa, bed, or console and the bottom of the art. Spacing: for multi-deck pieces, keep an even ~5–10cm gap, tops aligned and level. Light: warm 2700K light makes the maple glow, and the glassless surface never glares.
These principles hold in every room; what changes room to room is the mood, the subject, the durability demands, and the best wall. Master these basics once and you can place a deck confidently anywhere. So apply universal principles everywhere — eye-level height, 50–75% scale, even spacing, warm light. See our how to hang guide and size guide.
The Living Room
The living room is where skateboard art most often becomes the star. As the home’s main social space, it calls for a statement: the wall above the sofa is the natural focal point, ideal for a bold multi-deck triptych or a 4–5-deck set spreading one image across the boards. Fill 50–75% of the sofa width and leave ~15–25cm above the back. Above a fireplace, a striking single or set anchors the room. The living room can take your boldest, most expressive piece — a dramatic classic, a vivid Post-Impressionist triptych, a striking custom design.
Because the living room is seen and used most, it rewards investing in a real focal point here. A confident, well-sized, well-lit piece transforms the whole room. So the living room suits a bold statement — a multi-deck focal point above the sofa or fireplace. See our above the sofa guide, above the fireplace guide, and feature wall guide.
The Bedroom
The bedroom is a restful retreat, so skateboard art here should calm rather than energise. The wall above the bed is the focal point — a serene classic, a soft Japanese motif, a gentle abstract, or a restful monochrome piece, centred over the headboard. A diptych or triptych makes a balanced statement; use a safety wire for multi-deck pieces above where you sleep. Keep the palette soft and the mood quiet.
Beyond the headboard wall, a single deck on a facing wall or beside a dressing area adds a personal touch. The bedroom is also a lovely place for a meaningful custom piece — a couple’s portrait, a map, a star map of a special night. So the bedroom suits a calm, restful piece above the bed, ideally personal. See our bedroom guide and above the bed guide.
The Kitchen
The kitchen is where skateboard art’s durability really shines. The wipe-clean, glassless, sealed-maple deck copes with the warmth, steam, and splashes that trouble framed paper-and-glass, making it genuinely practical here. A single deck on a free wall, a small set in a breakfast nook, or a piece on the end of a run of cabinets brings warmth and character to a hard-working room. Choose lively, warm, or appetising subjects — a vivid still life, a warm classic, a fun custom piece.
Keep the deck a sensible distance from direct splashes and heat (not immediately behind a hob or sink), and an occasional wipe keeps it fresh. The kitchen proves skateboard art isn’t just decorative but practical. So the kitchen suits durable, wipe-clean decks — practical and characterful. See our kitchen guide and care & cleaning guide.
The Dining Room
The dining room is a social, often more formal space, and skateboard art makes a fine focal point here. A striking piece on the main wall — a bold classic, a dramatic set, an elegant diptych — gives diners something to admire and a talking point over meals. Centre it on the main wall or above a sideboard, sized to fill the space, and light it warmly for an inviting evening atmosphere.
Because dining rooms are used for gatherings, a conversation-starting piece works especially well — a dramatic Baroque scene, a characterful custom design, or a sophisticated classic. So the dining room suits a striking focal point or conversation piece on the main wall. See our dining room guide and above the sideboard guide.
The Bathroom
The bathroom is the room most people hesitate to hang art in — but the sealed maple deck handles a well-ventilated bathroom’s humidity far better than paper-and-glass, which can spot, warp, and trap condensation. A single tall deck suits the typically narrow bathroom wall beautifully, adding a spa-like sense of considered calm. Choose serene, fresh subjects — a Hokusai wave, a koi motif, a calm abstract, a soft monochrome.
Ensure reasonable ventilation (as you would for any bathroom), keep the deck away from direct shower spray, and it will stay fresh with an occasional wipe. The bathroom is an underused spot where the deck genuinely excels. So the bathroom suits a serene tall deck — humidity-tolerant where framed glass struggles. See our bathroom guide and powder room guide.
The Hallway & Entrance
The hallway and entrance make the first impression of your whole home — high-impact because they’re the first thing anyone sees — and the tall deck is perfectly suited to their typically narrow walls. A striking deck by the entrance welcomes guests and sets the tone; a row or gallery of decks down a hallway turns circulation space into a gallery. Because hallways are narrow, the slim deck fits where wide framed art can’t.
Choose a memorable, characterful piece for the entrance — it’s your home’s opening statement — and consider a themed series down a longer hall. So the hallway and entrance suit a memorable deck or gallery — a strong first impression on narrow walls. See our hallway & staircase guide and vestibule & entry guide.
The Staircase
The staircase wall is one of the most underused high-impact spots in a home, and the tall deck suits it beautifully. The rising line of a stairway pairs naturally with the vertical deck, or with a climbing gallery of decks that follows the stair line — turning dead wall into a striking feature seen from multiple levels. A double-height stairwell wall is a spectacular opportunity for a large or stacked arrangement.
Follow the diagonal of the stairs with your arrangement, keeping consistent spacing, and the result is dynamic and professional. So the staircase suits a climbing deck or gallery that follows the rising line. See our stairwell guide and landing guide.
The Home Office
The home office benefits from art that supports how you work — either calm focus or motivating energy. A calm, minimal, or monochrome deck aids concentration; a bold, inspiring, or meaningful custom piece motivates. A deck behind you also makes an excellent video-call backdrop, bringing personality and a professional, considered look to your on-screen space. Position it where you’ll see it from your desk, or behind you for calls.
The office is a great place for a personal custom piece — a motivating quote, a map of a meaningful place, your own design — that keeps you inspired through the day. So the home office suits a focusing or motivating deck — and a great call backdrop. See our home office guide and quote & typography guide.
The Nursery & Kids’ Room
The nursery and children’s room are wonderful places for skateboard art, and the glassless deck is genuinely safer here than framed glass — nothing to break, shatter, or injure. Choose gentle, playful, or whimsical subjects for a nursery; fun, colourful, or character-led pieces for an older child’s room. A custom piece is especially lovely — the child’s name, a birth star map, or their own drawing turned into art.
Hang securely and, for multi-deck pieces above a cot or bed, use a safety wire. As the child grows, decks are easy to swap for evolving tastes. So the nursery and kids’ room suit safe, glassless, playful, often custom decks. See our nursery & kids guide, kids’ name guide, and child’s drawing guide.
The Teen’s Room
A teenager’s room is where skateboard art’s cool factor lands hardest — the deck form has genuine teen appeal, and the art can reflect their personality and interests. Bold graphics, pop-art pieces, music or sports themes, or a fully custom design of something they love all work brilliantly. It’s a chance to give a teen real, quality art that feels like theirs rather than a disposable poster.
Let them choose or design it — ownership matters at that age — and the durable deck will survive a busy teen room and last well beyond it. So the teen’s room suits cool, bold, personal decks — ideally their own choice or custom design. See our teen room guide and gaming & esports guide.
The Games Room & Man Cave
The games room or man cave is made for skateboard art — a relaxed, personal space where the deck’s cool character is right at home. Bold graphics, sports or music themes, pop-art pieces, or a gallery of decks bring energy and personality. This is a space to have fun with art: go bold, go personal, build a collection on the wall.
Custom pieces shine here — a favourite band, team, film, or a personal design — making the room unmistakably yours. So the games room and man cave suit bold, fun, personal decks and gallery walls. See our man cave & games room guide and band & music guide.
The Home Bar
A home bar is a characterful, social spot that suits striking, atmospheric skateboard art. A bold classic, a dramatic piece, a vintage-style design, or a custom deck (a favourite drink, a personal motif) adds the right convivial energy. Hang it behind or beside the bar as a backdrop, well lit, to set the mood for evenings.
The home bar is another place to enjoy bolder, more characterful choices than you might elsewhere — it’s a space for personality. So the home bar suits striking, atmospheric, characterful decks as a backdrop. See our home bar guide and vintage & retro guide.
The Home Gym
A home gym benefits from energising, motivating skateboard art — bold, dynamic, high-energy pieces that lift the mood of a workout. Vivid colour, strong graphics, a motivating quote, or a dynamic custom design all work. The durable, wipe-clean deck also copes well with a gym’s warmth and activity. Position it where you’ll see it while training, for a motivating focal point.
A custom motivational piece — a quote, a personal goal, an energising image — makes the space your own. So the home gym suits energising, motivating, durable decks. See our home gym guide and motivational quote guide.
Small Spaces & Apartments
Small spaces and apartments are where the deck’s slim, tall form is a genuine advantage. At just ~20cm wide, a single deck fits narrow walls, piers between windows, and tight nooks where bulky framed art won’t go, and its vertical line draws the eye up to make a compact room feel taller. One clean deck adds art without the clutter of multiple frames, and the light, damage-free hanging suits flats perfectly.
In a small space, favour a single deck or slim diptych over a large statement, lean into the height-adding vertical, and let one well-chosen piece be the focal point. So small spaces suit a slim single deck or diptych — height-adding and clutter-free. See our small spaces guide and narrow wall guide.
Open-Plan & Studios
Open-plan spaces and studios benefit from skateboard art’s ability to define and zone areas. A deck or set can mark the “living” zone, another the “dining” or “work” zone, giving an open layout structure and identity without walls. A consistent deck style across zones ties the whole open space together, while different subjects subtly distinguish each area.
Use larger statements for the main zones and smaller accents for secondary ones, keeping the format consistent so the open space reads as one cohesive scheme. So open-plan spaces suit decks that zone and unify — structure without walls. See our studio & open-plan zoning guide and open-plan kitchen-diner guide.
Cafes, Bars & Commercial
Skateboard art is a natural fit for commercial spaces — cafes, bars, restaurants, studios, offices, and shops — where it brings cool, distinctive character and stands up to busy, high-traffic environments. The durable, glassless deck is practical for public spaces, and a series or gallery of decks makes a memorable, on-brand interior. Custom decks are ideal here — a logo, a brand motif, a themed series — turning the art into part of the business’s identity.
For commercial fit-outs, a cohesive set or gallery makes the strongest impression, and bulk or custom orders can carry branding. So commercial spaces suit durable, distinctive, often custom-branded decks. See our cafe, bar & restaurant guide, commercial guide, and logo & brand guide.
Rentals & Temporary Homes
Rentals and temporary homes are ideal for skateboard art because of how easily it hangs and removes. At ~1kg, a deck goes up on a single damage-free adhesive strip — no drilling, no holes, no lost deposit — and comes down cleanly when you move, art and all. It lets renters decorate properly without compromise, and the art moves with you to the next home.
Favour single decks and damage-free fixings, and you can fill a rental with real, lasting art that you keep. So rentals suit damage-free, easily-moved decks — decorate fully, take it with you. See our renters guide and damage-free display guide.
Choosing Size by Room
Size should follow the room and its walls, always via the 50–75% rule. Living room: go large — a triptych or 4–5-deck set above the sofa. Bedroom: a diptych or triptych above the bed, or a single on a side wall. Kitchen, bathroom, hallway: usually a single deck, given narrower walls. Dining room: a triptych or bold single on the main wall. Office, nursery, teen room: a single or small set. Stairwell, feature walls: larger sets or climbing galleries. Small spaces: a single or slim diptych.
In every case, measure the wall or furniture and fill 50–75% of the width, sizing up if in doubt. The room sets the ceiling; the rule sets the target. So choose size by room via the 50–75% rule — large for living rooms, single decks for narrow rooms. See our sizes & formats guide and expanded size guide.
Choosing Style by Room
Style should follow the room’s mood. Living room: bold, expressive, statement styles. Bedroom: calm classics, soft Japanese, gentle abstracts, monochrome. Kitchen/dining: warm, lively, appetising subjects. Bathroom: serene, fresh, watery motifs. Hallway/entrance: memorable, characterful pieces. Office: focusing minimal or motivating custom. Nursery/kids: gentle or playful. Teen/games room: cool, bold, pop-art, personal. Home bar/gym: atmospheric or energising.
Match the style’s mood to what each room is for — energy where there’s activity, calm where there’s rest — and the whole home feels considered. For the full style breakdown, see our ultimate guide to skateboard art styles and styles explained guide. So choose style by room — match the mood to the room’s purpose.
Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Hanging too high. Centre around eye level (~145–150cm) in every room. See the hanging guide.
Mistake 2: Wrong scale for the room. Go large in living rooms, single decks in narrow rooms; fill 50–75%.
Mistake 3: Energising art in a restful room. Keep bedrooms and nurseries calm.
Mistake 4: Calm art where you want energy. Go bold in living rooms, games rooms, gyms.
Mistake 5: Fearing humidity. The sealed deck suits well-ventilated kitchens and bathrooms. See the bathroom guide.
Mistake 6: Leaving narrow walls bare. The slim deck is made for hallways, piers, and stairs.
Mistake 7: Drilling a rental. Use damage-free strips. See the renters guide.
Mistake 8: Glass art around children. The glassless deck is safer for nurseries and kids’ rooms.
Mistake 9: Ignoring the furniture below. Relate the art’s width to the sofa, bed, or console.
Mistake 10: Forgetting custom. Many rooms are perfect for a personal custom deck. See the design service.
Ten Room Starting Points
1: The Living-Room Triptych (~$310)
A bold statement above the sofa. See the above the sofa guide.
2: The Bedroom Calm Piece (~$140–$230)
A serene deck above the bed. See the bedroom guide.
3: The Kitchen Accent (~$140)
A durable, warm deck. See the kitchen guide.
4: The Bathroom Serene Deck (~$140)
A fresh, calm motif. See the bathroom guide.
5: The Entrance Statement (~$140)
A memorable first impression. See the hallway guide.
6: The Staircase Gallery (~$420+)
A climbing feature. See the stairwell guide.
7: The Office Backdrop (~$140)
Focus or a call backdrop. See the home office guide.
8: The Kids’ Custom Deck (~$140)
Safe and personal. Start at the design-your-own-deck service.
9: The Games-Room Gallery (~$420+)
Bold and fun. See the man cave guide.
10: The Small-Space Single (~$140)
Slim and height-adding. See the small spaces guide.
Extended FAQ
Which rooms can I put skateboard art in?
You can put skateboard art in every room of the home, because the medium is exceptionally versatile and you tailor the piece to each room’s function and mood. In the living room it makes a bold statement — a multi-deck triptych or 4–5-deck set above the sofa or a striking piece above the fireplace. In the bedroom it brings calm — a serene classic, soft Japanese motif, or gentle monochrome above the bed. In the kitchen and bathroom its durable, wipe-clean, glassless surface copes with humidity that troubles framed glass, making it practical where most art struggles. In the hallway, entrance, and up the staircase, the tall, slim deck suits narrow walls and rising lines perfectly, turning circulation space into a gallery. In the home office it provides focus or motivation and a smart video-call backdrop. In the nursery and kids’ room the glassless deck is safer than glass and perfect for playful or custom pieces. In a teen’s room, games room, man cave, home bar, or home gym its cool character and durability shine with bold, personal, energising designs. It also excels in small spaces and apartments (the slim form fits narrow walls and adds height), in open-plan spaces (zoning areas without walls), in rentals (damage-free hanging), and in commercial spaces like cafes and bars. Each room calls for its own approach to placement, size, and style, all covered in this guide. DeckArts from ~$140, shipped from Berlin. Design your own deck here. See our best rooms guide and ideas guide.
Can I really hang skateboard art in a kitchen or bathroom?
Yes — the kitchen and bathroom are actually among the rooms where skateboard art has a real practical advantage, because the sealed maple deck copes with warmth, steam, and humidity far better than the paper-and-glass of a conventional framed print. A framed paper print in a humid room can foxing-spot, cockle, warp, or trap condensation behind the glass; a skateboard deck has no paper to degrade and no glass to fog, and its UV-cured image sits on a sealed, wipe-clean wooden surface that simply shrugs off the conditions. In the kitchen, a single deck on a free wall, in a breakfast nook, or at the end of a run of cabinets adds warmth and character to a hard-working room — just keep it a sensible distance from direct splashes and the immediate heat of a hob, and give it an occasional wipe. In the bathroom, the tall deck suits the typically narrow wall beautifully and brings a spa-like calm; choose serene, watery subjects like a Hokusai wave or a koi motif, ensure the room has reasonable ventilation as any bathroom should, and keep the deck out of direct shower spray. Under those sensible conditions, a deck will stay fresh and vivid for years where framed art would struggle. This humidity tolerance is one of the quiet practical benefits that sets skateboard art apart. DeckArts from ~$140. Design your own deck here. See our kitchen guide and bathroom guide.
What’s the best room to start with?
The best room to start with is usually the living room, because it is the space you and your guests see and use most, so a single well-chosen piece there delivers the biggest visible impact on your home — but the honest answer is that the best room to start with is whichever room currently bothers you most or offers the clearest opportunity. The living room is the classic first choice: the wall above the sofa is a natural focal point that can take a bold multi-deck triptych or set, and getting that one wall right transforms the whole room. If your living room is already sorted, consider the entrance or hallway, since it sets the tone for the entire home and the tall deck suits its narrow walls perfectly, making it a high-impact, low-effort win. The bedroom is a lovely starting point if you want something personal and calming, especially a custom piece like a couple’s portrait or a star map. And if you are testing the waters or on a budget, a single deck in a smaller room — a home office, a nook, a narrow pier — is a low-commitment way to experience the medium before scaling up. Wherever you start, the same principles apply: hang at eye level, fill 50–75% of the wall or furniture, and choose a piece you genuinely love. Many people begin with one deck and find themselves adding more, room by room, over time. The 30-day return makes starting low-risk. DeckArts from ~$140. Design your own deck here. See our how to choose guide and collection guide.
How do I choose the right size for each room?
Choosing the right size for each room comes down to applying one rule — fill roughly 50–75% of the width of the wall or the furniture the art sits above — and letting the room and its walls set how large that target is. In a living room, where walls and sofas are wide, that points to a large piece: a triptych (~70cm) or, better, a 4– or 5-deck set (~95–120cm) above the sofa. In a bedroom, a diptych or triptych works above the bed, or a single deck on a side wall. In a kitchen, bathroom, or hallway, the walls are usually narrower, so a single deck (~20cm wide) is typically right — and the tall, slim shape is a positive advantage in those tight spaces. A dining room suits a triptych or a bold single on the main wall; an office, nursery, or teen room a single or small set; a stairwell or dedicated feature wall a larger set or a climbing gallery; and a small space a single or slim diptych. The method is always the same: measure the available width, take 50–75% of it as your target art width, and pick the format that lands in range — and if you are caught between two sizes, size up, because going too small is the single most common decorating mistake and leaves art looking stranded. Remember every deck is the same ~85cm tall, so you are really planning horizontal space. DeckArts from ~$140. Design your own deck here. See our sizes & formats guide and expanded size guide.
Is skateboard art safe in a child’s room?
Yes — skateboard art is genuinely one of the safer choices for a nursery or child’s room, precisely because it is glassless, which removes the single biggest hazard of conventional framed art. A framed print or canvas behind glass can break, shatter, and injure if it is knocked off the wall, which is a real worry above a cot or in a play space; a skateboard deck has no glass at all — the UV-cured image sits on a solid, sealed maple surface — so there is nothing to shatter. The deck is also robust and lightweight (~1kg), and it is sealed and wipe-clean, which is handy for the sticky fingers of family life. For safety, hang it securely with the right fixing for your wall, and for multi-deck pieces above a cot or bed, use a safety wire as a sensible precaution, exactly as you would for any art above where a child sleeps. Beyond safety, the nursery and kids’ room are wonderful places for skateboard art: choose gentle, playful, or whimsical subjects, or make it personal and meaningful with a custom deck — the child’s name, the star map of their birth night, or their own drawing turned into lasting art. And because decks are easy to swap, the art can evolve as the child grows. DeckArts from ~$140. Design your own deck here. See our nursery & kids guide and child’s drawing guide.
Can skateboard art work in an open-plan space or studio?
Yes — skateboard art is particularly useful in open-plan spaces and studios, because beyond simply decorating it can help define and zone different areas without the need for walls or partitions. In an open layout where living, dining, and working areas share one space, art is one of the most effective tools for giving each zone its own identity, and the consistent deck format is ideal for this: you can place a deck or set to anchor the “living” zone, another to mark the “dining” or “work” zone, and because every deck shares the same shape and finish, the separate zones still read as one cohesive, intentional scheme rather than a jumble. Use larger statements (a triptych or set) for the main zones and smaller single-deck accents for secondary ones, keeping the format consistent so the whole open space feels unified. Different subjects or palettes can subtly distinguish the zones while the shared deck format ties them together — for example, a calm piece over a relaxation corner and a more energetic one by a dining or work area. In a studio apartment, the same approach helps separate “bedroom” from “living” visually, and the slim deck’s space-efficiency is a bonus in a compact open space. So the deck both decorates and organises an open-plan home. DeckArts from ~$140. Design your own deck here. See our studio & open-plan zoning guide and small spaces guide.
Article Summary
One of skateboard art’s greatest strengths is its versatility — it works beautifully in every room of the home, each room calling for its own approach to placement, size, and style. A few universal principles apply everywhere: centre art around eye level (~145–150cm); fill 50–75% of the wall or furniture, sizing up if in doubt; leave ~15–25cm above furniture; keep even ~5–10cm gaps in multi-deck pieces; and light with warm 2700K light, glare-free thanks to the matte, glassless surface. Room by room: the living room suits a bold multi-deck statement above the sofa or fireplace; the bedroom a calm, restful, often personal piece above the bed; the kitchen durable, wipe-clean decks that cope with humidity; the dining room a striking focal point or conversation piece; the bathroom a serene tall deck where framed glass would struggle; the hallway and entrance a memorable piece or gallery on narrow walls; the staircase a climbing deck or gallery following the rising line; the home office a focusing or motivating deck and call backdrop; the nursery and kids’ room safe, glassless, playful or custom decks; the teen’s room cool, bold, personal designs; the games room and man cave bold, fun gallery walls; the home bar atmospheric backdrops; and the home gym energising, motivating pieces. Beyond standard rooms, the slim deck excels in small spaces and apartments (height-adding and clutter-free), zones open-plan spaces and studios without walls, brings durable character to commercial spaces like cafes and bars (often custom-branded), and suits rentals perfectly with damage-free, easily-moved hanging. Choose size by room via the 50–75% rule — large for living rooms, single decks for narrow kitchens, bathrooms, and hallways — and choose style by room’s mood — bold and expressive for social and active spaces, calm for restful ones, memorable for entrances. Avoid hanging too high, the wrong scale for the room, energising art in restful rooms (and vice versa), fearing humidity, leaving narrow walls bare, drilling a rental, glass art around children, ignoring the furniture below, and forgetting custom. Ten room starting points: the living-room triptych, the bedroom calm piece, the kitchen accent, the bathroom serene deck, the entrance statement, the staircase gallery, the office backdrop, the kids’ custom deck, the games-room gallery, and the small-space single. DeckArts from ~$140, shipped from Berlin with a 30-day return. Design your own deck at /products/skateboard-art.
About the Author
Stanislav Arnautov is the founder of DeckArts and a creative director from Ukraine based in Berlin. He writes about classical art, interior design, and the craft of turning Grade-A Canadian maple decks into lasting wall art.
Related Guides
- Design Your Own Deck — a personal piece for any room
- Best Rooms 2026 — the room companion guide
- Complete Guide 2026 — the full skateboard art reference
- Ultimate Guide to Styles 2026 — choosing style by room
- Sizes & Formats 2026 — choosing size by room
- How to Hang 2026 — placement in every room
- Small Spaces 2026 — compact rooms & flats
- Renters 2026 — damage-free in any room
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