Picking wall coverings shouldn’t feel like taking a final exam.
It does though.
You walk into the store. Or scroll for twenty minutes (and) suddenly you’re staring at vinyl, grasscloth, peel-and-stick, and something called “textured plaster effect.”
Who even says that?
I’ve stood there too. Staring. Wondering if beige wallpaper counts as a personality choice.
This isn’t about trends or rules.
It’s about what works in your space (what) hides that weird wall bump, calms a chaotic room, or finally makes your guest bathroom feel like it belongs to you.
How to Choose the Right Wall Coverings Mrshomint cuts through the noise.
No jargon.
No fake confidence.
You’ll learn how to match material to room, budget, and real life (not) Pinterest.
And yes, you’ll walk away knowing exactly which option won’t peel by July.
By the end, you’ll pick wall coverings like someone who’s done it before.
Because now you have.
Start With Why the Room Exists
I picked wallpaper for my bedroom because I wanted to sleep better. Not prettier. Better.
You need to ask what the room does before you pick anything for the walls.
Is it where you cook three meals a day? Where your kids do homework and spill juice? Or where you shut the door and breathe?
That answer changes everything.
A kitchen needs wipeable surfaces. Not pretty paper that peels when steam hits it. I learned that after scrubbing grape jelly off peel-and-stick tiles for twenty minutes.
(Spoiler: they did not survive.)
Bedrooms need calm. Light colors. Soft textures.
Living rooms? That’s where mood swings matter. Dark green velvet wallpaper made my living room feel like a library in a good way.
Nothing loud or busy. My guest room has linen-textured paint. Zero pattern, zero glare, zero stress.
Not stuffy. Just quiet.
You already own furniture. So look at it. Does your couch scream “modern” while your wall choice whispers “cottagecore”?
That’s a fight you’ll lose every time.
How to Choose the Right Wall Coverings Mrshomint starts with this question: What do you need this room to do for you today?
I found real options. Not just samples (at) Mrshomint. No fluff.
Just wall coverings that match how you actually live.
Don’t decorate around a trend. Decorate around your life.
Paint, Wallpaper, and What’s Actually Worth Your Time
I paint walls. A lot. Matte hides flaws but smudges easy.
Eggshell? My go-to for living rooms. It wipes clean and doesn’t glare.
Satin and semi-gloss go in kitchens and bathrooms. They hold up. But they also show every bump in the drywall.
(You’ll sand more than you think.)
Wallpaper isn’t just grandma’s floral. Vinyl handles moisture and scrubbing. Non-woven installs faster and breathes better.
Grasscloth looks rich (until) it traps dust or gets nicked by a chair.
You want drama? Try wood panels. Real wood.
Not fake veneer. They warm up a room instantly. But they cost more and need skilled hands.
Fabric coverings soften noise and light. They’re gorgeous in bedrooms. And impossible to clean if your kid spills juice on them.
Decorative plaster? Yes, it’s beautiful. No, you probably shouldn’t DIY it.
Hire someone who’s done it five times before.
Cost? Paint wins. Hands down.
Wallpaper starts cheap but climbs fast with prep and labor. Wood and plaster? Budget double what you think.
Installation time matters. Paint dries in hours. Wallpaper takes a full day.
Minimum. Wood panels? Plan for a week.
Maintenance is where most people quit. Paint touch-ups take five minutes. Wallpaper seams lift.
Fabric stains. Plaster cracks.
So what would I pick? For most rooms: eggshell paint. For one accent wall?
Vinyl wallpaper. For a dining room that needs presence? Real wood panels.
How to Choose the Right Wall Coverings Mrshomint comes down to this: match the material to how you actually live. Not how you wish you lived.
Durability Isn’t Optional

I pick wall coverings like I pick shoes. If they fall apart after three months, I’m done.
You live there. You spill coffee. You wrestle kids off the couch.
You breathe humid air in the bathroom. So why would you choose something that buckles at the first sign of real life?
Washable is non-negotiable in kitchens and kids’ rooms. Non-washable wallpaper? Fine for a guest bedroom where nothing ever happens.
(Spoiler: that room still gets dust.)
Vinyl handles steam and splashes. Paper tears if you look at it wrong. That’s not opinion.
That’s what happens when you wipe a bathroom wall with a damp cloth.
Think about your actual habits. Not the Pinterest version of your life. Do you vacuum weekly?
You hate scrubbing walls. I hate scrubbing walls. So don’t buy something that needs scrubbing.
Or biannually? Same logic applies here.
Moisture warps some materials. Sunlight fades others. Pet claws snag certain textures.
These aren’t edge cases. They’re Tuesday.
How to Choose the Right Wall Coverings Mrshomint means asking: What breaks first in my house? Then avoiding that thing.
If you’re already thinking about mattress durability (yeah,) same energy applies here. learn more
Maintenance isn’t a bonus feature. It’s the main event.
You’ll clean it. Or you won’t. Either way, pick accordingly.
Mistakes I Made With Color, Pattern, and Texture
I painted my living room charcoal gray without testing it first. It looked like a cave at 4 p.m. on a cloudy day.
Light colors do make rooms feel bigger (but) only if your lighting is decent.
Dark colors can feel cozy. Unless you forget about natural light and end up with a dungeon.
I bought wallpaper with a huge floral pattern for a small bathroom. It screamed “look at me” every time I brushed my teeth. Bold patterns need breathing room.
Subtle ones? They’re quieter. They work in tight spots.
Texture is where I got smart. Grasscloth on one wall added warmth to an all-white kitchen. Textured paint hid scuffs better than flat white ever did.
You must get physical samples. Swatches on a white wall in daylight lie to you. Hold them next to your sofa fabric.
Tape them to the wall. Live with them for two days.
Light changes everything. That warm beige at noon looks cold and sad under overhead LEDs at night. Same goes for lighting fixtures (light) color and placement shift how wall coverings read.
Which is why learning How to create mood with light fixtures mrshomint helped me fix half my wall mistakes.
How to Choose the Right Wall Coverings Mrshomint isn’t about rules. It’s about watching what happens when light hits texture at 7 a.m. And not trusting your eyes before noon.
Walls That Feel Like Home
I’ve been there. Staring at swatches. Second-guessing every choice.
Wondering if that bold print will look great (or) just loud and wrong.
It doesn’t have to be hard.
You already know what matters: where the room lives (kitchen? kid’s room? quiet office?), what the material can take (scrubbing? sunlight? sticky fingers?), and how it fits you. Not a trend, not a magazine, but you.
That’s why How to Choose the Right Wall Coverings Mrshomint isn’t about rules. It’s about confidence.
You don’t need permission to pick the color that calms you. Or the texture that makes your hallway feel like a hug.
You’ve got the steps. You’ve got the clarity. Now trust it.
What’s stopping you from picking one wall. And trying it this weekend?
Not all rooms need full coverage. Start small. Test bold.
Back out if it’s wrong. No one’s grading you.
Your home isn’t a showroom. It’s where you breathe. Where you spill coffee.
Where you laugh too loud.
So stop waiting for “perfect.”
Go pick something real. Something warm. Something yours.
Then go hang it.
You’re ready.


Senior Living Space Design Curator
Blyxara Dwell is a senior design curator at Xhasrloranit, specializing in living space innovation, interior flow optimization, and functional home design. Her work focuses on creating balanced environments that combine minimalism with practical usability, ensuring that spaces are both visually appealing and highly efficient. She develops concepts that transform ordinary interiors into structured, comfortable living environments while also contributing to visual strategy, layout planning, and styling direction. Blyxara’s design philosophy emphasizes harmony between aesthetics and functionality, and she plays a key role in shaping the visual identity and creative direction of Xhasrloranit’s design-focused content.
