A curated 9-piece gallery wall of vintage car art prints in white frames styled over a modern white crib with blue and white gingham wallpaper.

How To Choose The Right Art Size For a Nursery: A Designer's Guide

You’ve picked the crib, the wallpaper is up, and the paint is dry. Now comes the most important part: the "focal point." Choosing the right scale for your nursery art is the difference between a room that feels "unfinished" and a room that looks like it belongs in an interior design magazine.

1). The Golden Rule of Scale

Curated 9-piece set of colorful car and truck art prints displayed in a 3x3 grid above a white modern crib with neutral gingham wallpaper.

A coordinating set of 9 Matchbox prints perfectly balanced to fill 75% of the width of a standard crib.

The most common mistake Moms make? Choosing art that is too small.

  • The Rule: Your art (or set of prints) should take up approximately
    60% to 75% of the width of the furniture below it (the crib or the dresser).

  • The Math: If your crib is 52 inches wide, your art display should be roughly 32–39 inches wide total.

  • The Matchbox Solution: This is why our Sets of 6 or 9 are so popular—they perfectly fill that visual gap without looking cluttered.

    Ready to build your own gallery wall? [ Browse the Matchbox Car Collection here → ]


2). Standard Layouts for Every Space

The three most popular nursery setups:

A. The "Power Trio" (Above the Crib)

Mother holding baby in a nursery with a toddler playing, featuring a 2x2 set of matchbox car art prints on the wall behind them.

Whether you choose a balanced Trio of 3 or a structured set of 4 like our Designer Set here, the goal is to create a soft, intentional backdrop for your most precious moments.

Pro Tip: Leave 2–3 inches of space between each frame. This "breathing room" makes the series feel cohesive rather than cramped.

 

B. The Gallery Grid (The Designer Favorite)

Set of four vintage matchbox car art prints in white frames, arranged in a 2x2 gallery grid on blue vertical stripe wallpaper in a designer boy’s nursery.

A 2x2 grid creates a high-impact focal point. In this room designed by Helen Davis, our Matchbox Series is framed in navy to pop against the vertical stripe wallpaper—a classic designer move.

  • Best for: Large, empty walls or over a long double-dresser.

  • The Setup: A 2x3 grid (6 prints total) or a 2x2 grid (4 prints total)

  • The Vibe: This creates a high-end, curated look. Our Matchbox Series was designed specifically for this; the coordinating colors make a grid of 6 look like one massive, intentional piece of art.

[ → Shop the Matchbox Series: Curated Sets of 3, 6, and 9 ]

C. The Dresser/Nook

Six coordinating vintage car prints in white wood frames styled over a white dresser with blue herringbone wallpaper in a sophisticated boy's bedroom.

While the crib often gets all the attention, the dresser is actually the workhorse of the nursery—and it usually offers a much wider "canvas" for your art. Whether it’s a dedicated changing station or a tall chest of drawers, this is where you can truly let a series shine.

  • The Pro Move: Instead of hanging one large piece, use a horizontal row of three to "ground" the dresser. It makes the furniture feel like a built-in part of the room’s design.
  • The Nook Factor: If you have a narrow "reading nook" or a small wall next to a closet, don't leave it blank! A vertical stack of two prints can turn a cramped corner into a curated moment.
  • The Matchbox Advantage: Our prints are designed with enough detail to be appreciated up close (like when you're standing at a changing table) but enough bold color to be seen from across the room.

Designer Tip: If your dresser has a lamp or a tray of essentials on one side, offset your art slightly to the other side to create a sophisticated, asymmetrical balance.

Ready to build your own gallery wall? [ Browse the Matchbox Car Collection here → ]


Why Sets Win: The 9-Piece Car Grid

Grid of nine colorful vintage car illustrations in white frames on modern gray dotted wallpaper for a minimalist boy’s room.

[Explore the Curated Walls→]


If you have a large, empty wall that feels intimidating, a 9-piece grid is the ultimate designer "cheat code." While a single large painting can sometimes feel heavy or singular, a grid of nine smaller prints creates a rhythm that draws the eye across the entire space.

  • Curated Color Stories: The biggest hurdle in creating a gallery wall is making sure the colors don't clash. With our Matchbox and Airplane series, the color theory is pre-calculated. Every print in the set of 9 is designed to "talk" to the others, creating a wash of coordinating tones that feel intentional, not accidental.
  • The "Window" Effect: A 3x3 grid acts like a window into another world. It turns a blank wall into a focal point that feels architectural.
  • Versatility for Growing Boys: As your son grows from a baby to a toddler and beyond, these sets grow with him. The sophisticated, vintage-inspired illustrations look just as "cool" in a big-boy room as they do in a nursery.
  • The Upscale Impression: In the world of interior design, a perfectly aligned grid is the hallmark of a professional touch. It signals that every detail of the room was considered.

Designer Tip: When hanging a 9-piece grid, use a laser level or a simple cardboard template. Keeping the spacing (we recommend 2-3 inches) consistent between every frame is what makes the final result look like a high-end installation.

[Explore the Curated Walls→]

Back to blog