Tremé Wrought Iron Damask Wallpaper

from $60.00

Details

Whether you want to transform a feature wall or an entire room, our Tremé Wrought Iron Damask Wallpaper offers an original way to decorate your home with culture and style. This custom peel-and-stick wallpaper can be mounted onto any surface, is removable and re-positionable, and won't leave a residue behind, making it the perfect choice for renters and homeowners alike. The beautiful, modern damask pattern, highlighted by a deep off-black shade, is a celebration of the incredible Black culture and history of New Orleans. PVC and VOC free, fire rated and pre-coated with adhesive for easy application, the Tremé Wrought Iron Damask Wallpaper is a fabulous addition to any room.

Editors' Note

Since ancient times damask fabrics have been woven and valued for their intricate, reversible patterns. Over the years this once very specific term has expanded to include any luxury fabric with a complex, reversible pattern. In that time, damasks have become popular worldwide, particularly in West Africa, where Bazin fabric imported from overseas is used to weave fabulous boubou — flowing, wide-sleeved robes often featuring dazzling combinations of pattern and color. The patterns, which range from florals to geometrics in infinite variety, are rife with symbolism and meaning. In keeping with that tradition, our Tremé Damask Wallpaper is an ode to its namesake region — the Tremé district in central New Orleans. Founded in the early 1800s as an enclave for the city’s free people of color, and named for Claude Tremé, who purchased the land sometime earlier, it was (and is) the location of the famed and sacred Congo Square, where New Orleans’ enslaved population congregated on Sundays to commune and dance before the spread of American slave codes in the city put an end to the practice. Today, the square and the neighborhood itself are remembered for their profound impact on African American music and culture. From its inception, Tremé was home to a variety of notable figures and places in African American history including Saint Augustine Catholic Church, which welcomed both free and enslaved Black people and is the oldest Black parish in America, and Rose Nicaud, an enslaved woman who was the city’s first coffee vendor. Pushing her car through Congo Square on Sundays, she sold coffee black and with milk, using the proceeds to purchase her freedom.

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Details

Whether you want to transform a feature wall or an entire room, our Tremé Wrought Iron Damask Wallpaper offers an original way to decorate your home with culture and style. This custom peel-and-stick wallpaper can be mounted onto any surface, is removable and re-positionable, and won't leave a residue behind, making it the perfect choice for renters and homeowners alike. The beautiful, modern damask pattern, highlighted by a deep off-black shade, is a celebration of the incredible Black culture and history of New Orleans. PVC and VOC free, fire rated and pre-coated with adhesive for easy application, the Tremé Wrought Iron Damask Wallpaper is a fabulous addition to any room.

Editors' Note

Since ancient times damask fabrics have been woven and valued for their intricate, reversible patterns. Over the years this once very specific term has expanded to include any luxury fabric with a complex, reversible pattern. In that time, damasks have become popular worldwide, particularly in West Africa, where Bazin fabric imported from overseas is used to weave fabulous boubou — flowing, wide-sleeved robes often featuring dazzling combinations of pattern and color. The patterns, which range from florals to geometrics in infinite variety, are rife with symbolism and meaning. In keeping with that tradition, our Tremé Damask Wallpaper is an ode to its namesake region — the Tremé district in central New Orleans. Founded in the early 1800s as an enclave for the city’s free people of color, and named for Claude Tremé, who purchased the land sometime earlier, it was (and is) the location of the famed and sacred Congo Square, where New Orleans’ enslaved population congregated on Sundays to commune and dance before the spread of American slave codes in the city put an end to the practice. Today, the square and the neighborhood itself are remembered for their profound impact on African American music and culture. From its inception, Tremé was home to a variety of notable figures and places in African American history including Saint Augustine Catholic Church, which welcomed both free and enslaved Black people and is the oldest Black parish in America, and Rose Nicaud, an enslaved woman who was the city’s first coffee vendor. Pushing her car through Congo Square on Sundays, she sold coffee black and with milk, using the proceeds to purchase her freedom.

Details

Whether you want to transform a feature wall or an entire room, our Tremé Wrought Iron Damask Wallpaper offers an original way to decorate your home with culture and style. This custom peel-and-stick wallpaper can be mounted onto any surface, is removable and re-positionable, and won't leave a residue behind, making it the perfect choice for renters and homeowners alike. The beautiful, modern damask pattern, highlighted by a deep off-black shade, is a celebration of the incredible Black culture and history of New Orleans. PVC and VOC free, fire rated and pre-coated with adhesive for easy application, the Tremé Wrought Iron Damask Wallpaper is a fabulous addition to any room.

Editors' Note

Since ancient times damask fabrics have been woven and valued for their intricate, reversible patterns. Over the years this once very specific term has expanded to include any luxury fabric with a complex, reversible pattern. In that time, damasks have become popular worldwide, particularly in West Africa, where Bazin fabric imported from overseas is used to weave fabulous boubou — flowing, wide-sleeved robes often featuring dazzling combinations of pattern and color. The patterns, which range from florals to geometrics in infinite variety, are rife with symbolism and meaning. In keeping with that tradition, our Tremé Damask Wallpaper is an ode to its namesake region — the Tremé district in central New Orleans. Founded in the early 1800s as an enclave for the city’s free people of color, and named for Claude Tremé, who purchased the land sometime earlier, it was (and is) the location of the famed and sacred Congo Square, where New Orleans’ enslaved population congregated on Sundays to commune and dance before the spread of American slave codes in the city put an end to the practice. Today, the square and the neighborhood itself are remembered for their profound impact on African American music and culture. From its inception, Tremé was home to a variety of notable figures and places in African American history including Saint Augustine Catholic Church, which welcomed both free and enslaved Black people and is the oldest Black parish in America, and Rose Nicaud, an enslaved woman who was the city’s first coffee vendor. Pushing her car through Congo Square on Sundays, she sold coffee black and with milk, using the proceeds to purchase her freedom.

 

Additional Details

Watercolor Damask Wallpaper

Material: Self-adhesive paper (10.32oz)

Pattern Type: Basic, Pattern Dimension(W x H): 24.41 inch x 18.08 inch)

Roll lengths:

Sample (24.4” x 11.8”)

1.4 yd roll (24.4” x 49.2”)

2.7 yd roll (24.4” x 98.4”)

3.3 yd roll (24.4” x 120”)

5.5 yd roll (24.4” x 197”)

10.9 yd roll (24.4” x 394”)

No Paste required

PVC / VOC Free

Versatile and Re-positionable

Removable within one year of application

Washable (not waterproof)

Soft sheen finish, light texture

Class-A fire rated for all interiors

Can be placed in residential and commercial spaces

Made to order

Designed in New York

Sustainably handmade in the UK

Ships worldwide in 3-4 weeks

Shipping and returns policy

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