Bring Heritage To Your Modern Home: Introducing Sabyasachi Wallpapers at Marble Lotus - Marble Lotus

Bring Heritage To Your Modern Home: Introducing Sabyasachi Wallpapers at Marble Lotus

Written by: Batul Rizvi

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Time to read 5 min

Sabyasachi Mukherjee’s design world has always existed at the intersection of memory and material. The Sabyasachi Wallpapers and his work does not chase the new, it revives, reinterprets, and preserves. Drawing from India’s vast cultural archive, his creations are imbued with a sense of permanence that transcends trend. These Sabyasachi Wallpapers are yet another proof of that.

In translating this vision to wallpapers, the medium itself evolves. These are not surface treatments or decorative afterthoughts. The Sabyasachi wallpapers are narratives in themselves. Rich with motifs, textures, and references that echo textiles, archives, and heirlooms.

Each design carries a certain familiarity, as though it has existed before—perhaps in a forgotten corridor, an old haveli, or within the folds of a vintage sari. Sabyasachi wallpapers brings depth and emotion from the heart of the sub-continent directly to your walls. 

Deepika Padukone for Sabyasachi Wallpapers

Visual Appeal To Storytelling: The Power of Sabyasachi Wallpapers

To bring Sabyasachi wallpapers into interior spaces is to shift the role of design from visual appeal to storytelling. Florals are not merely ornamental, they feel archival. There is a quiet maximalism at play, where richness is balanced by restraint, and detail reveals itself gradually. 

From Paris to Calcutta: How Sabyasachi Put Couture on Your Walls

Sabyasachi Mukherjee and Deepika Padukone for Sabyasachi wallpapers by NilayaAsian Paints launched the Paris-Calcutta Collection with Sabyasachi on February 19, 2024 — a tale of two cities “exuberant in spirit and abundant with art, thought, charm and glamour”. With 30+ wallpapers and 120+ fabrics, this Sabyasachi wallpapers collection ranges from large-scale damasks to reinterpreted kilims and paisleys that embody Sabyasachi’s take on the souks of North Africa and Persia.

What Makes Sabyasachi Wallpapers Couture

Not just wallpaper rolls, these are Sabyasachi atelier for your walls.

  1. 43 Artists, Not Machines: Every motif on the Sabyasachi wallpapers starts as a hand-painted artwork by The Sabyasachi Art Foundation. Struggling traditional artists get studio time to paint Bengali tigers, Taj Mahal cameos, and archival florals that later become your wallcovering. You’re literally buying craft preservation by the yard.
  2. The Couture Techniques: Look closer at pista Jamdani — you’ll see a peeling gold zari effect. That’s intentional. Sabyasachi took the Asian Paints team to their UK printing house to perfect how thread-like textures and vintage textile decay could be printed on the Sabyasachi wallpapers, not flattened.
  3. Built Like a Collection, Not a Catalog: Like his fashion lines, this drops in “sub-lines” — Makhmal for velvet-soaked maximalism, Thar for sun-washed linens, Chowk for crisp geometric order. With these Sabyasachi wallpapers, you don’t just pick a color. You pick a worldview.

The Perfect Layering: Marble Lotus x Sabyasachi Cheent Wallpaper


Cheent in Lapiz is Sabyasachi’s take on timeworn florals from “English conservatories and old Calcutta salons.” From the Sabyasachi wallpapers collection this jewel-toned blue carries the depth of artisan brushwork and wraps a room in quiet, collected beauty.

Use the Sabyasachi wallpapers Lapiz as a feature wall in a bedroom or powder room. The blue is strong, so keep accessories calm and crafted. Place a Lotus Urli on a low console or entry table in front of it. The still water and metallic edge reflect the paper’s depth without adding visual noise. Add the Marble Inlay Jewelry Box in Blue on a dresser. The lapis color match feels intentional, and the inlay echoes the heirloom textile detailing Sabyasachi references. For wall balance for the Sabyasachi wallpaper hang the Green Gate Jaipur City Palace Fine Art Print on an adjacent plain wall. The archival green + blue palette ties the room together and keeps the focus on craft, not clutter.

Heirloom on Your Walls: The Velvet-Glove Guide to Sabyasachi Wallpapers Care

Sabyasachi wallpapers shift the role of design from visual appeal to storytelling. Treat them like the heirlooms they are.

Sabyasachi wallpaper
Installation: Start Right With Your Sabyasachi Wallpapers
  • Professional installation is strongly recommended because many Sabyasachi wallpaper designs have large motifs, pattern matching, and delicate specialty finishes
  • Install the Sabyasachi wallpaper only on smooth finished walls, primed painted surfaces, or properly prepared masonry
  • For best results, use Nilaya wallpaper glue or a premium heavy-duty adhesive for non-woven wallpapers
Daily Care: The Velvet-Glove Rules
  • Dust your Sabyasachi wallpaper monthly with a soft microfiber duster. No scrubbing.
  • Blot spills immediately with a dry, white cloth. Don’t rub — many designs use mica, shimmer, or pearl substrates
  • Keep the wallpapers away from steam and splashes. Ideal for living rooms, dining rooms, bedrooms, boutique hotels, and designer office cabins

A Natural Dialogue with Marble Lotus

At Marble Lotus, our approach has always been to build homes that feel rooted—through pieces that carry memory, not just presence. Across wallpapers, textiles, furniture, and objects, there is a shared sensibility. Design that feels familiar, almost inherited. In Sabyasachi wallpapers, we recognise that same instinct of drawing from culture with restraint and depth. The alignment with Sabyasachi wallpapers feels less like a collaboration, and more like a natural continuation, therefore, this is not an addition, but an extension.

Paired with Marble Lotus pieces, the Sabyasachi wallpapers create spaces that feel layered rather than styled. They allow interiors to move beyond coordination and into composition—where every element holds its own story, yet belongs to a larger whole.

Summary

What it is: Sabyasachi wallpapers for Nilaya by Asian Paints, now at Marble Lotus. Not decor — narratives where heritage endures

Latest Sabyasachi wallpapers collection: Paris-Calcutta, launched Feb 19, 2024. 30+ wallpapers, 120+ fabrics inspired by Calcutta, “the Paris of the East”

Design DNA: Hand-painted motifs by The Sabyasachi Art Foundation. Quiet maximalism where richness is balanced by restraint on the Sabyasachi wallpapers

Materials: Premium non-woven, textured paper, smooth luxury finish, mica/shimmer, and pearl substrates in select designs of the Sabyasachi wallpapers

Best for: Living rooms, dining, bedrooms, boutique hotels, luxury restaurants. As seen in Vikas Khanna’s Bungalow NYC

Install: Pro installation strongly recommended. Use Nilaya glue. Only on smooth, primed walls

Care: Dust, don’t scrub. Blot, don’t rub. Avoid wet zones

Marble Lotus fit: Natural continuation of our philosophy — homes that feel rooted, layered, not styled

Author

Batul Rizvi | Marketing Manager, Marble Lotus

All Sabyasachi wallpapers mentioned here and listed on our website are available at our studio. If you’re in the Bay Area, drop by to see the textures and scale in person. Your walls deserve more than an afterthought.

Find Yourself At Home

Are Sabyasachi wallpapers suitable for every room?

They’re ideal for living rooms, dining rooms, bedrooms, powder rooms, boutique hotels, luxury restaurants, and designer office cabins. Avoid wet zones like inside showers or backsplashes without a glass seal. They’re also beautifully suited for hospitality interiors, as seen in Vikas Khanna’s Bungalow NYC.

Can I install it myself?

Professional installation of Sabyasachi wallpapers is strongly recommended. Many Sabyasachi designs have large motifs, pattern matching, and delicate specialty finishes. Improper matching will affect the final look.

What kind of wall prep is needed?

Install Sabyasachi wallpapers only on smooth finished walls, primed painted surfaces, or properly prepared masonry, MDF, acrylic, glass, or laminated panels. Not recommended on rough, flaky, damp, or cracked surfaces without treatment first.