Grey and silver are the easiest colors to match in home design. They don't fight with the sofa, don't clash with the wall, and don't look dated after a year. If you have a living room in neutral tones, a grey sofa and white walls, or you simply want a piece that fits naturally into your existing design, the abstract collection in grey and silver tones is the safe starting point. Here's how to choose, and why this palette works in almost any space.
The modern Israeli living room is mostly built around a neutral palette: white walls, a light floor and a grey sofa. Within this scheme, a piece in grey and silver tones doesn't demand attention at the expense of the rest of the room, it joins it. That's the big advantage of this palette, it doesn't lock you into one lead color. Grey pairs with blue, natural wood, black and gold, so the same piece will still work even if you swap a curtain or throw pillows two years from now. Silver adds a subtle sparkle and a sense of luxury without being showy, which makes these pieces a sophisticated choice for people who want visual interest without drama. In a piece like "Fire and Silver Waves," the metallic tones flow in a soft motion that draws the eye up close but stays calm from a distance, exactly what you need above a sofa.
At the center of the collection stand two abstract pieces that demonstrate this palette exactly. "Fire and Silver Waves" is one wide piece in which metallic waves in silver and grey tones move horizontally, perfect for hanging above a sofa or console. "Blue and Silver Wave" is built from three parts that spread across the wall and create a wide, impressive presence, with the silver balancing the blue and keeping a clean, neutral look. Alongside them, the whole Abstract category offers dozens of pieces in soft, quiet tones, from morning mist to layers of light, that suit anyone looking for a minimalist, calming look. If you have a wide wall, a set of three pieces will fill it in a balanced way without overloading.
A simple rule of thumb: the width of the piece should be about two-thirds of the width of the furniture beneath it. Above a three-seat sofa, one wide piece like "Fire and Silver Waves" or a three-part set gives the right balance, while above a narrow console a single, focused format is better. Every piece is available in a range of sizes and two print technologies: stretched canvas that gives a warm, artistic look, and tempered glass that adds shine and depth and especially emphasizes the silver tone. In a living room with lots of natural light, the glass will reflect the metallic sparkle and intensify it; in a quieter, warmer space, canvas will soften everything. All orders are shipped ready to hang, nationwide.
Almost everything. Grey and silver are neutral tones that blend with white, black, blue, natural wood and gold. That's exactly why they're a safe choice: the same piece will keep fitting even if you swap a sofa, curtain or throw pillows in the future.
Stretched canvas gives a warmer, more artistic look and softens the tones, while tempered glass adds shine and depth that especially highlight the silver sparkle. If your living room has lots of natural light, the glass will intensify the metallic effect.
The rule of thumb is that the width of the piece should be about two-thirds of the sofa's width. Above a three-seat sofa, one wide piece like "Fire and Silver Waves" or a set of three that fills the wall in a balanced way works well.
Yes. The "Blue and Silver Wave" piece is built from three parts that create a wide presence on the wall, and the Three Pieces category includes more options in a suitable neutral palette.
Yes. All pieces are shipped nationwide and arrive ready to hang, both on canvas and on tempered glass, in a range of sizes to choose from.