How to measure wall size
Add 5–10cm (2–4 inches) to both your final width and height.
1. Standard Rectangular Wall

This is the straightforward "big rectangle."
- Width: Measure the horizontal distance from the left corner to the right corner. Measure at the top, middle, and bottom. Record the widest measurement.
- Height: Measure from the ceiling to the top of the baseboard/skirting board. Measure at the left, middle, and right. Record the tallest measurement.
2. Walls with Obstacles (Doors, Windows, Fireplaces)

The Golden Rule: Measure the wall as if the obstacle isn't there.
- Measure the total width and total height of the entire wall area.
- Do not subtract the area of the window or door. The mural will be printed as a full rectangle, and you will simply trim away the excess during installation. This ensures the pattern remains continuous.
3. Sloped or Pitched Walls

If you're dealing with an attic or a "feature" ceiling:
- Width: Measure the longest part of the wall (usually the floor line).
- Height: Measure the highest point of the wall (the peak).
- Note: Your mural will arrive as a square or rectangle; you will trim the slope away during hanging.
4. Continuous Mural (Wrapping Around Corners)

If you want one single image to flow from one wall onto the next, treat them as one giant wall.
- Width: Measure the width of Wall A, then Wall B, then Wall C. Add these together for your Total Width.
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Height: Measure the height of each wall section. Walls in the same room are often slightly different heights. Use the tallest height found across all connected sections.
The "Hinged" Check: Use a level to see if the corner is straight. If the corner is crooked, you will need extra margin to ensure the pattern aligns when you transition from one wall to the other.
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