Kitchens are the most-used room in many homes and the trickiest for art, because grease, steam, and tight, broken-up walls all work against you. Solve those three and the kitchen becomes a genuinely rewarding place to decorate. This practical guide covers the clearance rule, the finish that survives cooking, mounting on backsplash and tile, and sizing for small walls.
1. Respect the grease-and-steam clearance rule
The rule unique to kitchens: keep art at least 12 inches from the stovetop and sink, and out of the direct splash and steam arc. Cooking aerosolises grease that settles on nearby surfaces, so give art room, or place it in the dining zone away from the action. Safe spots include a coffee station, a wall between cabinets, a breakfast nook, and above a dining sideboard.
2. Choose a finish that wipes clean
In a kitchen, always frame under glass. Glass wipes clean of grease and steam in seconds; unframed paper absorbs moisture, warps, and stains. This one choice is what lets art survive years of cooking. See framed vs unframed prints for the full comparison.
3. Mount it safely on backsplash or tile
If you're hanging on a tile backsplash, drill into the grout lines (not the tile face) with a tile bit and proper anchors, or skip drilling entirely with heavy-duty removable adhesive strips rated for the frame's weight. Both avoid cracking tile.
4. Size for small, interrupted walls
Kitchen walls are chopped up by cabinets and outlets, so smaller formats fit best: 8" x 10" or 11" x 14" between cabinets, 16" x 20" on a free wall or coffee corner. In the dining room you have room for an 18" x 24" or 24" x 36" statement.
5. Choose food-loving, high-energy themes
The kitchen suits playful, appetite-friendly art: retro coffee, witty food typography, and bold graphics that pop against neutral cabinets. This casual, social room can carry more color and humor than a formal space. See our coffee wall art guide for a coffee-corner take.
6. Build a coffee-bar mini gallery
A trio of small framed prints above a coffee station reads like a cafe wall. Share a palette, align tops or centers, and keep even 2 to 3 inch spacing.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Unframed paper near the stove: it warps and stains, frame under glass.
- Drilling the tile face: go through grout lines or use adhesive.
- Oversized art in a tight kitchen: scale down to fit between fixtures.
- A lonely print on a big dining wall: go bigger or group a set.
Browse the Coffee & Kitchen collection when you're ready.